@vbuendiar Super excited to see it! I'm working on my network science dissertation, and based on a quick skimming of your google scholar link, I'm sure it will be very interesting!
@freemo I mean I can comfortably use like 8+ languages (actually a lot more, I taught 7 in my class lol), but the OO paradigm generally just makes my stomach churn and both Java and C++ tend to fixate on it from my own experience (not to say they don’t support others but I find the other paradigms in these languages rarely employed). To be fair, maybe Java has improved their FP tooling since I last picked it up, but man if this was Clojure (since it runs on JVM) instead it would be much more palatable to me.
@freemo I was super interested until I saw the languages. I have used Java and C++, but man I really don't like to 😭
If you were willing to be flexible there, I would totally think of applying for that Data Scientist role, especially since I teach a lot of that stuff and use it regularly (and we chatted about it when I first joined actually, if you remember 😁)
But I assume that's not the case, and I am now sad, lol
If you have any positions coming up using lisp, julia, etc lemme know, I'll apply once I wrap up my dissertation, especially if I'm allowed to come to NL to work (and redecorate your office like you said 😉 😂 )
@freemo Oh actually it's in the near micromolar solubility so you're fine.
@freemo When I used to teach lab it wasn't, but I honestly can't recall it's exactly Ksp. I'm fairly certain that *technically* all "insoluble salts" are partially soluble to some degree, but functionally I think your boat would be fine...as long as you can find a way to make silver chloride crystals large enough that it'll stay in one piece xD
@freemo Nah bro, *FLEX* on all those less wealthy than you with a Silver Chloride rowboat! Sure it won't look silver, and nobody but us will know, but we'll know 😉 😂
@freemo Depending on which salt you pick, it might not even dissolve when you use it! 😂
@E_Nonymouse @dramypsyd My wife is autistic (I helped her get diagnosed a few years ago...somehow I was the first one to notice despite all the signs, and there were a lot, lol) and we've figured out a lot of coping strategies that help us both function better both separately and together.
I think her diagnosis and our shared experiences explains a lot of my own experience and behaviors as well, though we'll see.
@Ulrich_the_Elder@mastodon.social my wife had very similar responses on that front, and I suspect the people who fall into camp one are either unaware or autistic themselves (as we figured out with my in laws, lol).
I agree self-diagnosis *can* be valid, but I would argue that subjective experiences can be brought about by a variety of underlying factors, and having a knowledgeable professional capable of sussing out the minutiae to allow for the development of successful coping strategies (depending on the issues a person deals with) will likely be more helpful for non practitioners. Thoughts?
@jmw150 I honestly agree, I've had some amazing profs and some super bad ones this semester, and of course the bad one had an attendance policy...and the course I teach had some awful students but no attendance policy. The latter scenario was somewhat more bearable. (Also, I think attendance policies don't factor in illnesses, and other adult responsibilities. I'm here because I want to learn, but if I'm not here, it may be because I'm sick, my wife is sick, my house flooded, etc. and these aren't always accounted for which frustrates me).
@LouisIngenthron @Paulos_the_fog
His point is that punishing people after the fact doesn't bring the kids back. That is to say, if we wanted kids to not be killed, rather than to punish people who kill kids despite the fact they know they will be punished, changes need to be made of some sort.
The question is, what changes are those?
Does this mean preventing certain people from purchasing guns? Does it mean forcing guns to have GPS in them that can alert schools or other premises that ban their presence of their approach/entry? Does it mean better security and police presence? Better designed schools with in-class security measures? An outright gun ban?
Personally, as someone who owns a firearm for self-defense, and is always incredibly careful when practicing, cleaning, and so-forth, I would prefer to keep my gun in the event some psycho decides to victimize me/my family. If they have a gun, and I don't I'm screwed. If we both have them, at least I have a chance, and if I'm the only one with one, it makes it much easier for me to control the situation and prevent harm.
If we could guarantee nobody had guns, that may be preferable; however, there are people who require them to defend their property from wild boars, coyotes, etc, and there are people who can fabricate them if they wanted to (e.g the GhostGun cnc project).
I think there is a solution here, but I don't think it's a simple one such as "banning" guns or "cracking down" even more on mass murderers (especially since consecutive life sentences are really worthless and don't actually increase the penalty if you think about it). The problem is that we refuse to think rationally about how to actually solve the problem and deal with it in an effective manner.
Violence and murders still happen even in places that ostensibly don't have guns, and guns still find their way into those countries anyway. Unless we can deal with motives, mental illness, and outright malice, we won't be able to stop the senseless violence against defenseless children regardless of banning guns (though it may make the types of mass causalities and targets on schools less prevalent).
@admitsWrongIfProven @freemo It's like the "one-drop rule" of ideologies; how convenient! It allows us to avoid dealing with the actual difficulties of the human condition and being reasonable to one another! /s 😂
@steve @vicgrinberg Have y'all heard of/tried out steam cleaners yet ? I bought one a few years ago (Dupray is the best brand IMO) and I will never go back. It does bathrooms, kitchens, floors, clothes (at least de-wrinkling, lol) and more, and in an instant. I hope this also places me somewhere on the adulthood ladder 😂
Do you get to work from home every day or just certain days? If the former, how do you manage that as a Prof?
Also, what's your favorite breakfast to make? 😁
Okay, I love this but I want to nitpick, so prepare yourself:
1) I am seeing a startling lack of neodymium magnets and pogo pins to connect the boards together when linked, rather than constantly relying on the cable between the halves. Adding to this, why a separate macropad with separate "to-pc" cable instead of passing through the rest of the keyboard like the right half?
2) I feel like you could easily make this thing completely wireless between halves/modules when split using bluetooth (or logitech's unifi dongles) between them, and toggle-able between the wire-to-computer and wireless-to-computer modes would be a nice touch for
✨U L T I M A T E✨
✨F L E X I B I L I T Y✨.
3) I LOVE THE KEYCAPS where did you get them and how many limbs do I need to sell to afford them?
4) You cannot go on the internet with a keeb-build and prevent us from judging you by refusing to provide the switches you used. I'm pretty sure that violates the keyboard Geneva convention or something. (Also, soldered or hot-swap? And prefab circuit board, self-cnc'd board, or hand wired?)
5) Macro keys look sick, as do the little extras around the keyboard.
6) I like the knob(s), but what do it (they) do?
7) What be the sensor looking thingy below the knob?
Overall, I rate this keyboard a solid tenkeyless+macropad out of 40%.
"Improvements" I would suggest is an aluminum/steel base for heft, a solid wooden (preferably oiled walnut or cocobolo) upper half, and at least 10 solenoids that fire synchronously every time you hit a key, like [this](https://youtu.be/a5QyJOwJusQ?t=10) (see the earlier part for the "before solenoid" sound).
But in all seriousness, it looks great! (And I would love to see a slightly less wired version lol)
@freemo Probably not, but I'm going to start 😂
Sorry to hear that 😥 Here's hoping he takes a nap at some point.
Are you at the wanting to be heard stage or the action oriented stage?
If the latter, I have a tip from my wife that she uses to manage problems like this considering her sensory issues, just let me know if you want her secrets for future trips 😁
@vicgrinberg Oh I get it, James is the spider, and his web is the scaffold for the telescope; I always wondered who it was named after! 😂
A previous analytical biochemist, (functional) programmer, industrial engineer, working on a PhD with a focus in complex systems.