potate

joined 2 years ago
[–] potate@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 week ago

It's more expensive than SPF, but I spring for cedar - I built my planter boxes, garden beds, and patio furniture out of it. No staining required, zilch upkeep. I built a 3m x 1M raised bed planter several years ago and it's required zero upkeep so far. Ditto my patio set built five years ago.

[–] potate@lemmy.ca 16 points 1 week ago (3 children)

I way prefer the wood for what it's worth. I love weathered wood - it ages beautifully, lasts for years and years, and the environmental impact of cedar (assuming that's what it is) is far lower than concrete too.

Concrete is the plastic of things that aren't plastic. Produced mostly with fossil fuels, huge GHG associated with production, and will sit as a lump of trash forever-ish once the next person decides they prefer a different look.

Make your own decisions obviously - I'm aware that I'm particularly carbon footprint averse.

[–] potate@lemmy.ca 33 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

I live down the street from a school in Calgary. I'm building a 'little free banned library' that I'm going to be filling with every book the government bans

[–] potate@lemmy.ca 2 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Perfect is the enemy of good only if you WAIT for perfect. I eat minimal meat, get my veggies from a local farm share, have solar panels, an EV that charges only off excess solar production, a heatpump, have re-insulated the attic, ditched the gas range for induction that runs off solar, etc. My footprint is less than anyone around me, but probably still way higher than your average individual living in the global south.

I'm trying to hit net zero and once I hit it, I'll keep going because Canada (where I live) is rich and I want to continue to reduce my footprint (the dream is net negative in my life) because I'm privileged and have the resources to push harder. I make it a game - figure out what's my best opportunity to reduce my footprint, do it, move on to looking for the next thing I can do.

Giving up (most) red meat and patting yourself on the back is severely minimizing what you COULD be doing. I'm a long, long way from perfect, and am exceedingly lucky to have the resources to play this game - but carbon reduction is a way of life, not a checkbox IMO.

[–] potate@lemmy.ca 24 points 1 month ago (22 children)

But seriously, what IS vibe coding?

[–] potate@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 month ago

Totally agree and I try to avoid posting National Post properties. In this case, at the time of posting I didn't have an alternative (better) source in the moment.

 

Another day, another CPS officer getting special treatment and avoiding (most) consequences after assaulting an indigenous person.

I mean, I guess the poor guy did get told he has to miss his trip to Greece... I wonder what punishment would have been doled out if the situation was reversed?

[–] potate@lemmy.ca 131 points 2 months ago (11 children)

Legitimately one of my favourite YouTube channels. Tech deep dives (generally on extremely esoteric topics), sarcasm, and interesting insights.

 

Was tearing my hair out this morning when I couldn't listen to podcasts on the way to work. I updated my S23 Ultra to ONE UI 7 yesterday evening and this morning Android Auto was working fine EXCEPT that I had no audio. Adjustment of volume in the car and on my phone were unsuccessful.

The solution was to make a quick phone call and now audio works fine again. I have no idea why it worked or why audio wasn't working to begin with - but I thought I would share in case it helps anyone else.

[–] potate@lemmy.ca 42 points 2 months ago

Friendly reminder that getting vaxxed is free. My partner has a shitty immune system so I got two rounds of boosters.

Here in Alberta all you need to do is call 811 and they can book you in with a vaccine specialist.

[–] potate@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

What emulators do you recommend? I have an S23 but am about to try swapping it for a Fairphone running e/OS

[–] potate@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 months ago (4 children)

To be honest - that's probably the dream setup. The challenge is that android games seem to all be low-effort ad delivery systems.

My happiest place is turn-based strategy and RPGs. XCOM, Total War: Warhammer, anything Baldur's Gate, 4Xs that sort of stuff.

I have several hundred hours killing time on Unciv on Android. Mindustry is fun but cramped. Polybridge was great until I finished it.

[–] potate@lemmy.ca 9 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I had a decent PC back in the day (I grew up in the era of building my own water cooling systems) but as a casual gamer I can't wrap my head around around modern graphics card prices and I rather be able to play on the sofa for five minutes while I wait to pull something from the oven.

I'm old.

[–] potate@lemmy.ca 10 points 2 months ago

Joysticks need to be replaced again, battery life is becoming tragic so that needs replacing too. Any time I pick it up at this point, the battery is dead.

Biggest issue to be honest is that I want a bigger screen and that isn't the device's fault.

I'm going to order a whack of parts from ifixit and spruce it back up for those Nintendo exclusive hankerings.

89
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by potate@lemmy.ca to c/games@lemmy.world
 

Looking for some advice. My Switch Lite is approaching the end of its life and given that a Switch 2 is basically the same price as an OLED Steamdeck I was thinking it might be a good time to jump back to PC gaming.

I'm not much of a gamer. I got the Switch Lite because of portability and the ability to wake it up, play for ten minutes and then toss it back in my bag. My only beefs with the Switch ecosystem is that you can't download DLC - for Cities Skylines I have the bare game on Switch but a pile of DLC on my laptop for example.

So - would going with a Steamdeck make sense? Any gotchas I should know about? Is there a better option?

Thanks all!

**edit: y'all rock. I'm ordering an OLED Steamdeck

28
CNIB Pup Crawl 2025 (infosec.pub)
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by potate@lemmy.ca to c/canada@lemmy.ca
 

Hey everyone — let me know if this feels too promotional and I’ll happily take it down.

My partner and I are currently raising and training a future guide dog puppy named Stetson for the Canadian National Institute for the Blind (CNIB). These dogs are provided at no cost to people who need them — but demand far outpaces supply.

It takes 18–24 months to train a guide dog, and even then, only about half make it through the full program. Once placed, a guide dog works for only 6–8 years before retiring. That means one person might rely on up to ten guide dogs throughout their life.

These dogs are brilliant and unbelievably disciplined. Stetson will only go to the bathroom on command (so his future human knows it's safe and appropriate). When he's wearing his vest, he’s all business — you can drop kibble right in front of him and he won’t flinch. And when we say “head in”, he puts on his vest himself (we just do the buckle).

A really crazy concept is 'intelligent disobedience' - these super well trained dogs need to be able to identify an unsafe command and refuse it. Maybe their human wants to cross at a crosswalk but the dog sees traffic that isn't slowing down. They need to refuse the command to cross and wait until it's safe. That sort of cognition in a dog blows my mind.

Now, I grew up with dogs but was always hopeless at training — Stetson's skills are all thanks to the incredible CNIB trainers (who train us humans on how to train these epic pups). They coach us through everything and cover all of Stetson’s costs. It’s a huge commitment from CNIB, and it adds up fast.

That’s why Stetson (and my partner Christine) are taking part in the 2025 CNIB Pup Crawl. It’s a fundraiser to support this program — and anyone can join in. You can sign up, donate, or even just come cheer on a herd of goofball puppies during two 2.5 km walks happening here in Calgary.

If you are interested in what training a pup is like, ask me anything. If you have a few bucks to spare, please consider supporting CNIB, and if you are interested getting involved - do it - this is an incredible organization and the amount I've learned is wild.

19
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by potate@lemmy.ca to c/buycanadian@lemmy.ca
 

Just got a crate bed from Vagabond Pet Supply - made right here in Alberta.

Stetson, our CNIB guide pup in training hugely approves of the his thick new bed and they even sent along a knotted chew toy made from scraps of material.

I haven't tried it yet, but they also sell enzymatic cleaner in large containers. We have three cats, and a rotating cast of foster cats in addition to our training pup, so we go through the stuff like crazy. I ordered a gallon.

 

Thanks to Emporia's excellent tools, I have outlets and usb chargers in my house that only work when I'm generating excess solar. I don't need my power banks every day so they get plugged into those outlets.

Oh, and my car. My car only charges as fast as my solar generation permits. I love Emporia.

 

I've been doing the 'buy Canadian' thing for a few years now. I actually enjoy the game of trying to find cool folks making cool stuff and I know that there are others like me just like there are people who lack the time or inclination to do the research.

I also think it can be tricky for people looking at starting a business to be able to identify a need.

So what's a product you don't know of a Canadian alternative to?

Personally, it's cast iron cookware. Meyer makes great stainless stuff, but there isn't a single foundry making cast iron cookware in Canada. I've actually started emailing a few to see if I can find a Canadian foundry that would be willing to batch produce cast iron skillets. Finding a local brand already doing it would be a LOT easier!

 

Heads up to cyclists - NF Designs - makers of super nice riding wear is moving production to the US. Their stuff was made in Vancouver until recently - but they just announced that they are moving production. It isn't super clear from their website so I emailed asking if it was EVERYTHING or just select products that would be made in the US and their response sounds like it's everything.

Looks like I need to find a new brand of riding gear!

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