I don't get it. What's wrong with a Java Industrial Standard Library Object Relational Database?
PeriodicallyPedantic
I've gotta get back to preparing my coffin, I don't have time for this
After a history of ethically questionable jobs, I thought I had escaped it into something almost benign where we were only wasting the money of other companies.
Recently we started going balls deep into making AI products, and I feel very uncomfortable with it
Not a junk drawer. This is specifically kitchen utensils
It's not a junk drawer, it's specific to kitchen utensils.
Some other comments call it the food prep drawer or the kitchen overflow drawer
This isn't a junk drawer, this is something different.
We have this drawer. Full of kitchen utensils that don't fit nicely into other drawers.
My parents did not have this drawer. Or at least, not nearly to this extent. Idk how they did it with a smaller kitchen than we have.
I have to sat that the additional of a scale to that drawer is a wild choice
I mostly just meant "if you're gonna send up a CEL, then tell the customer what the CEL is without going to the mechanic, especially if there is a potentially trivial cause"
But yeah I get that OEMs just don't wanna. Capitalism is gonna capitalism.
It's almost always the reverse.
Regulation is what forced manufacturers to provide standard error codes over a standard protocol using a standard socket, so that people could self diagnose their car problems without getting locked into their dealership mechanic
I mean, I don't think they're taking about a full diagnostic. Just the code associated with a CEL.
It'd be nice if you could read the code from the dashboard or infotainment without digging out a code reader.
And it'd be even better if they had human readable descriptions for those codes, especially for OEM specific codes.
For most people, a CEL is all you really need. But sometimes and for some people, just telling them the problem would be super helpful.
For example, a loose gas cap is a CEL. Save people $100 at the mechanic if it was just like "check that your gas cap is tight"
I don't imagine I'm especially sensitive to those kinds of things, but I don't expect I'm especially insensitive to them either.
I personally feel like it's hard to get gamers to honestly self report these things, since being able to notice them is caught up on a lot of macho gamer ego bullshit. Whenever I see semi-rigurous tests, it turns out that people over report how sensitive they are.
So do I notice those things? Yeah, I think I do, but I'm not confident in my ability to self report it.
Have I ever experienced things like rubber banding and lag in the last decade? Of course. But rarely can I attribute it to the wireless network rather than server issues, since typically it'll go away when I change servers.
I will say that, personally, I don't find a lot of value in >120fps unless it's important to read a lot of moving text quickly.
Grave of fireflies, of course