[-] RandomUser@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

It's like everything, practice slowly, get good form wired in, then when you write fast for exams your writing will be worse than normal, but still legible.

[-] RandomUser@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago

Practice writing slowly and with good form. Write regularly, give yourself practice pieces. At uni you will be writing FAST, so it'll get worse if you don't keep disciplined.

Alternatively, learn to touch type, and type any work you need to hand in. - if your handwriting is so bad, you may want to make your notes legible to yourself for revision.

14

I want to store a battery powered device long term (decades) as a reference article, it will never be switched on or charged again. The problem is that it contains a small LiPo battery that will be very hard to remove.

Is there likely to be any significant risk I need to worry about? Once depleted will the battery be relatively inert?

[-] RandomUser@lemmy.world 13 points 2 months ago

I've avoided the conversation entirely. Ever since the pandemic I've done my own hair with clippers. Made a good enough job of it, even if I've sometimes needed to do a small adjustment the next day.

For a simple style it's not that difficult if you take your time.

[-] RandomUser@lemmy.world 18 points 4 months ago

Yes prime minister is the most accurate documentary about British politics of all time.

[-] RandomUser@lemmy.world 10 points 4 months ago

Do you on now anyone who uses disposable vapes? There may be a useful battery in one of those if you can't find an alternative.

[-] RandomUser@lemmy.world 12 points 4 months ago

There's a lot of Scotland, and don't underestimate driving times. Argyll is good, but can be rather wet any time of the year. Going around now you should be safe from the midgies. Recommend getting onto some of the islands too, and boat rides are always nice. Kerrera is a lovely little island just by Oban. It has a very atmospheric castle, though the teashop isn't as good as it was so pack a lunch. If you like a dram, make a tour of some distilleries, each has it's own character. Argyll has lots of archeology & standing stones if that's your thing. There are loads of lumpy bits of you like walking too. Pretty much anywhere is good, tourist hotspot are ok, but try to get off the beaten track once in a while.

If you're driving, and going onto country roads, please please please learn to reverse.

If you're lucky you may get to spot some wild haggis, but they're quite rare now. The farmed ones are cute but have a nasty bite so be careful.

Also don't neglect the borders, loads of history.

It may not sound your thing, but consider geocaching... It takes you to some interesting out of the way places.

[-] RandomUser@lemmy.world 6 points 5 months ago

I like a cheap watch, I made my two watches using Ali parts and Seiko movements. They look good enough to me and do their job perfectly. If anything goes wrong it won't break the bank to fix. Imagine scratching a rolex!

[-] RandomUser@lemmy.world 8 points 6 months ago

You will get stressed, maybe even angry. It's ok. Take a deep breath and walk away for a moment.

There doesn't seem to be much emotional support for men, but sometimes it's needed. Talk to someone, anyone, even talking to random people on the internet can help.

Enjoy the ride, you're in for a great adventure, and while it doesn't feel like it at the time, they really do grow up quick.

[-] RandomUser@lemmy.world 26 points 7 months ago

3 day working week will more likely mean companies cutting staff by 50%. Can't imagine most people being able to live when only working 3 days.

[-] RandomUser@lemmy.world 36 points 7 months ago

Why wasn't there security on the device? My works devices are password protected and it's a disciplinary offence if I share passwords or give unauthorized access.

If he gave them the login creds, then he should be penalised .

If he logged in and gave the device to non parliamentary staff, he should also be penalised.

He got caught because it cost money, which is the lesser offence. Cyber security should be more robust for ministers than it is for most companies, but seemingly not.

1
New Build (lemmy.world)
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by RandomUser@lemmy.world to c/watches@lemmy.ml

Do self build watches get the love in here?

This is my second build, I wanted a more relaxed every day watch with good readability as my eyesight is starting to go. I also fancied a bronze case and will let the patina form naturally. Any scratches, marks or dings will, I think, add character.

Inside is a Seiko nh36 to give me some options later if decide I need day/date.

Thought I'd made a mistake with the white hands but now really like them. It's nothing special or expensive but it meets my needs perfectly.

[-] RandomUser@lemmy.world 14 points 11 months ago

The PI is always a good place to start, but they're not cheap anymore. You can still do some useful things at the command line (not sure how fun, but a great education), python is there and very accessible. - get a camera and you could do some great things with open CV. Not sure what packages are out there though. Think you'd just have to follow some web tutorials.

As an alternative, have you considered an Arduino kit? Lots of great projects, all very well documented. Playing with LEDs, sensors, motors etc may keep their attention longer than a bash prompt.

1
submitted 11 months ago by RandomUser@lemmy.world to c/arduino@lemmy.ml

Project was to display tide information (time and height) on an LED panel. Fingers crossed the image loads!

OK, it's not an Arduino as such, it's an ESP32, but I programmed it on the arduino IDE. I get the time from an NTP time server and tide data from an API. A bit of messing around with daylight savings times and I display the next four tides on the Hub75 LED matrix. Date and clock is shown on the other side. Every 24 hours I pull new data down and sync the clock.

The good: It works as planned.

The bad: API keys and wifi creds are all hard coded so will need a firmware update if either change. Don't think I have sufficient pins left to allow me to read from an SD card.

The ugly: The wiring behind it is not beautiful. The code could do with a review and tidy. - Maybe even a bit of error handling wouldn't go amiss. Red and Blue are a bit jarring so close together and the blue is a bit swamped , especially when the brightness is turned down.

I may make an enclosure to keep it all together and keep the dust off and add a pir sensor to turn the display off when there's no movement. Or I may get bored and dismantle it!

[-] RandomUser@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago

many technical jobs are vocational in nature as it's impossible to turn it off after work. As long as it's not affecting your personal life & work life balance (and not affecting your friends and relations) then you are very lucky. Most people don't enjoy their work so you're in a good place. Importantly though, don't feel obligated to do work problems on your own time and don't let management expect it. Only do it if you want to.

I like the saying "give a man a job he loves and he'll never work again". it's been true for much of my working life.

1
submitted 1 year ago by RandomUser@lemmy.world to c/arduino@lemmy.ml

While not quite Arduino, I have an ESP32 (Arduino IDE) project to pull tide data via API and show it on a HUB75 led matrix. I've got most of the parts working separately but not quite got them all together yet. What is everyone else doing?

view more: next ›

RandomUser

joined 1 year ago