frank

joined 2 years ago
[–] frank@sopuli.xyz 5 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Sure! The tasting part is complex but to grossly simplify it:

Each site has a bunch of people who are taster verified and have other jobs (rigorous program that takes a while to be part of) and they 1+ taste panel per day on each site which has a mix of new beers, old shelf beers, all the new releases, all from all of the sites, plus other market stuff (competitor products). You don't usually know what you're tasting outside of trainings so you just use a bunch of chemical words to describe the beer (no, you don't say "fruity", you talk about the specific fruit compound like acetaldehyde or ethyl hexonoate).

They only use the data of attributes you're best at, so each taster is like an instrument that they're also Corsa calibrating with spiked samples throughout all of that.

The best part, by far? Free snacks; good ones too. We already had limitless free beer so that doesn't incentivize anyone

Beyond that NBB was dope. Love the people, love the beer, the company actually stands up for what it believes in. Based af, if it was in Europe I'd 100% work for them still. But we did wanna leave the US so....

[–] frank@sopuli.xyz 49 points 6 months ago (9 children)

I live in Europe, but was an expert taste panelist at New Belgium Brewing in the US when I lived there.

Lefthand Milk Stout Nitro is a great beer.

There's a lot of good beer all over the world (okay, much of it anyway). Quality has a LOT more to do with freshness, cleanliness, and lack of dissolved oxygen in the beer. You can also find bad beer most anywhere. Don't let someone making silly blanket statement get ya down.

I will just go ahead and contradict myself by making a blanket statement that the low end of food is just better in most of the EU cuz of how much stricter the rules are. From McDonald's to the grocery store, you kinda can't get "terrible" food.

[–] frank@sopuli.xyz 7 points 6 months ago

Denmark checking in, it was like $3 USD for 10 eggs yesterday, and Denmark isn't cheap

[–] frank@sopuli.xyz 4 points 6 months ago

Oh, duh, that's fantastic

[–] frank@sopuli.xyz 2 points 6 months ago (2 children)

Can you explain it for me? The aFd one? I know the AFD party of course

[–] frank@sopuli.xyz 5 points 6 months ago

Yeah, lots of teams are mixed nationality too

[–] frank@sopuli.xyz 2 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Oh cool, this is maybe what I was referring to anyway. Thanks for the link! I'll be grabbing this

[–] frank@sopuli.xyz 6 points 6 months ago (2 children)

Well there's lots of ways to measure speed. Some use a worm gear in the transmission, some use a sensor on the wheel hub. But all of them take tire diameter into account, unless you count like GPS, which afaik (though probably some really shitty privacy invading car may prove me wrong) isn't a thing for speedometers and odometers

So yes, all production cars, I believe.

[–] frank@sopuli.xyz 3 points 6 months ago

You're absolutely right!

I don't know of a single car that it wouldn't affect, but there could be some using a gps speed instead? Sounds like a bad idea to me

[–] frank@sopuli.xyz 7 points 6 months ago (2 children)

Well, I'd argue it's not a blanket "no". I've owned 9 crotch rockets and all? Of them had speed sensors on front sprockets. A lot of similar or the same designs within, so surely it's off ABS rings if they're newer, but a fair few of them have had speed deviations because of that

[–] frank@sopuli.xyz 44 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (11 children)

Hi! I was a controls engineering in the automotive industry in the US for a while.

Yup. You sure should! Some cars even have tire dimensions and quick selections of winter/summer tires for exactly that. Some cars make it much harder/impossible to do.

Same with motorcycles if you swap sprockets of course (a common modification)

Edit: seems bikes are a pretty mixed bag where the speed sensor is. Your mileage (and speed) may vary there

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