fushuan

joined 2 years ago
[–] fushuan@lemm.ee 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Yeah, no. I shouldn't know the basics of active directory because I'm not at the administrative end of that tool, I'm at the user end of it. I work with wildly different tools where AD and domains are completely irrelevant for my job. It's not even a siloed app, it's the whole sector of data engineering that doesn't touch systems management. That's a completely different speciality and it's as useless for me to gain experience there as is for my buddies that work in helpdesk and security to learn about distributed programming.

I agree with your assessment that having a global view is important, but that's not what helpdesk offers, that's what working on a startup of your sector offers, a wide array of tasks around the job you are specialising in.

Knowing how AD domains work doesn't teach me shit about proper terraform structuring, what's the best way to join multiple tables via spark, proper data manipulation, bash scripting skills (invaluable for my job and my buddies working at helpdesk know shit about bash).

You mention security, but disregard that there are tons of Devs that don't work on user facing apps, right now I'm working on automatic processes that access very well defined tables and write again in well defined places. I'm not the one designing the permission scheme on Azure or anything like that, what I need to know is how to analyse data, how to design proper ETL systems that are able to make and efficient use of distributed systems, and plan good validation tools of the coded systems. None of that interacts with whatever someone would do in helpdesk.

Helpdesk has a good vision on security issues facing users and how the access and permission architecture of all the tools at a company works. Very valuable work, yet irrelevant for me to have experience on it.

[–] fushuan@lemm.ee 2 points 2 months ago (3 children)

There's a big difference with help desk jobs and data engineering, for example. What's the point of having someone that knows spark and sql solving tickets about permissions because some dipshit from middle management decided to randomly start removing permissions? (Sorry, it's infuriating and I'm sorry for the people that need to reenable my user)

"Moving up" might make sense in regards to people management within a company, but that's not a very smart take when talking about technical fields. I get paid to analyse data and to propose, implement and test data solutions. That's what I know, it would have been dumb to ask me to start at help desk. I started in a startup to get diverse experience of several tools,and then directly moved into specialised jobs in bigger companies.

In fact, that's my take, people should start at startups to get a wide range of experience before specialising, helpdesk jobs don't really compliment a generic software developers skillset.

[–] fushuan@lemm.ee 1 points 2 months ago

And then they can legally paint us as criminals. That's kinda their plan, I don't get how you don't see that.

[–] fushuan@lemm.ee 10 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

In his defence, the first use of female was correct, "those who are young single and female" as an adjective. I'd say that the second one is wrong, but they did use women above too so I'd attribute it to having written female just above and typical 4chan brainrot. I'd keep an eye on this one but not crucify yet

[–] fushuan@lemm.ee 2 points 2 months ago

I hope not haha, it's crazy how such a minor cut doesn't heal for so long,but when you think of the elasticity that lips have it makes sense. So annoying tho.

[–] fushuan@lemm.ee 3 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (2 children)

I cut the edges of the mouth lips (rightmost and leftmost zones) while shaving my beard about two months ago, and I still get microcuts because since the zone is so flexible, it tears every time I open my mouth.

It's not even visible, it's just annoying and painful and not healed yet.

[–] fushuan@lemm.ee 17 points 2 months ago (1 children)

That's not how they were in Germany nor Spain, in both of these places they had no white stuff over it.

[–] fushuan@lemm.ee 16 points 2 months ago (5 children)

who I absolutely adore despite ... believing the Jews did 9/11 lmao

I'm surprised his take on women surprised you. I hope your response started with "what the fuck".

[–] fushuan@lemm.ee 9 points 2 months ago

And there are days where videogames are played 16 hours a day.

...release weeks are brutal don't at me.

[–] fushuan@lemm.ee 15 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Broooo, did you just say 500 as if that was cheap? Damn. That's what a whole ass tv costs.

Expecting for sound volumes to be somewhat balanced in a tv or generic player is not too much to ask, I don't care if a surround 5.1 or 9.1 system would have it sound right, because stuff shouldn't be fine-tuned for specialised gear, stuff should be fine-tuned for general usage and specialised gear should have in-house tweaks to make it work well.

You got it backwards and you sound pretty elitist. I get what you mean with general usage audio programs not fine tuning properly, but you are asking 90% of the population or programs to tweaks their systems so that they work for things fine tuned for 5% of the population/systems. You do see how that sounds pretentious, right? That's how it reads at least.

[–] fushuan@lemm.ee 0 points 2 months ago

I prefer for actors to mumble then their character is supposed to mumble, and just use subtitles. Maybe it's because I've gotten too used to subtitles from all the anime I watch but I always enable it for anything on YouTube or any other video content I consume.

Agree on the lightning part though, at least for action scenes, bad lighting is often used to cover for bad CGI. For narration scenes of the place is actually dark, I don't really mind for me to basically only see silhouettes, it's appropriate.

[–] fushuan@lemm.ee 4 points 2 months ago

(another user) I live in Spain, in a city where most of the region come to work. We have the vet in a nearby town, so we usually go there by car. Getting out of the city into the town takes around 15 minutes, of which around 10 are spent on a 120KMH highway. Bikes can't go on that road, completely banned, so they would need to go through another, way longer route. Yeah, it would take over an hour to go on a bike.

The people that live in that town that come to my city to work basically need a car, and it's not like they can't do their living in walking distance for every necessity but work. It is what it is.

also what the fuck 112 km/h is extremely fast

120KMH is the max here, but it's pretty common for highways to have that cap. Same for france iirc (130?) and germany, besides their funny uncapped road. In fact, sweden has very similar limits, where "motorways" go around 110 to 120. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_limits_in_Sweden

I'm surprised you don't know this, do you have a license?

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