SharkWeek

joined 1 year ago
[–] SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone 8 points 1 day ago (2 children)

It's not like filling a car, you have to lift the nozzle up and be careful (don't squeeze the trigger all the way).

Usually you want to fill to either the level of a metal plate that sits under the filling hole, or to the base of the filling hole itself, depending on the bike.

Don't sit on the bike while filling it.

So they get little jockeys on them?

Wild horses run for fun :-)

[–] SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone 24 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Never met a horse IRL that liked wearing a bridle ... are they both subs?

But the leftwing government was engaged in fuckery before the coup, too ... the whole thing was very complex, and remains a deep wound between people here in Spain.

[–] SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Taking a shower. I grew up without access to one, and every day I think a little thank you to the universe that I now have the ability to enjoy warm rain inside my house whenever I want it ... it's a little miracle.

[–] SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 2 days ago

Yes, like I said it kinda goes off track, lol

Compare that to Bakuon, though, where a young cross-dressing servant travels through time to empart proper motorcycle cornering technique, and the never-aging spirit of pure riding appears to be a teenage girl who can't take her helmet off.

[–] SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 2 days ago (2 children)

In what way?

The story kinda went off the rails in the second half, but compared to most anime I thought it was very not-weird (put it alongside Bakuon, the only other motorcycle - related slice of life anime I know of, and it's the paragon of normality)

[–] SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 3 days ago (4 children)

SuperCub theme tune plays in the background ...

Lovely bike BTW :-)

[–] SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone 5 points 3 days ago

A Roll Bounce meme? Truly tis a wonder to behold <3

[–] SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 3 days ago (2 children)

I recently read the trilogy of When Women Were Warriors. The main character got a bit Mary Sue towards the end, but other than that it was a good read.

It pulls one away from some modern societal norms, and also has some parts that hinge on gender inequality. It's also pretty gay.

[–] SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 3 days ago

Seems par for the course, TBH!

When our company got it's own AI instance there was a big announcement, then a couple of months later I (just a supervisor) was asked to evaluate it, and there's been no word of it since.

 

Does anyone have links to proper research or statistics regarding the negative impacts or poor quality of AI in business processes?

My sister in law, who is an accountant and doesn't understand computing outside of Excel (in other words, not at all), has been put in charge of a project to offload as much work onto AI as possible.

She's been sent on a course regarding how to set up an AI instance, and has no idea where to go with it ... I'm not sure if she's being set up for failure, or if the upper management are incompetent, or if they're going through the motions to keep stock prices up. Since this is a large multinational, it could be all three at the same time.

I'd like to help her manage expectations of those above, so that she doesn't get burned when it all inevitably fails, hence asking for links to studies :-)

 

Big text dump incoming ...

A couple of weeks ago I completely fell apart; I was ill, and pushed myself beyond my limits. The outcome was the most honest conversation I've ever had with my wife, and the conclusion we came to is that I need to air my emotions so I can process them healthily.

So, I've been trying to do that. I've cried at sad bits of TV shows, laughed joyously while teaching my wife to dance, and this last week at work I let myself be angry at incompetence.

When I was little I had emotional problems, and the solution at that time was physical discipline. Since coming through that I've been reserved and private, and taken a certain pride in being able to remain calm no matter what.

When I was angry at work I was careful not to direct it at a person, I focused on the task of fixing the problem. While doing this a member of my team came over to give me an update on his work, I nodded and said ok (all that was really needed) and he looked like a deer caught between the headlights.

I think I really scared him because he was subdued with me for the rest of the week, I've made sure he knows I wasn't angry with him.

So all that is to say, how do I deal with the guilt of scaring someone? I want him to be at ease around me ... my plan is to take some nice food in next week to share with everyone, but I haven't got any more tricks up my sleeve and I want to be able to express anger in a healthy manner in the future.

 

About a year ago I picked up a copy of Dirt 4 for very little money and put it on the side to play later (it appears that rally games drop in price when they no longer feature the latest cars).

One of the environments it features is Tarragona in Spain, which is where I live. Having actually started playing it I can say that the modeling and course design for my home stages is absolutely spot on - I live in a small village halfway up a small mountain which is often used for the WRC, and the stages really do feel like my daily commute.

The car handling, progression, team management stuff, etc, is good - with the variable difficulty settings it's very accessible to casuals like me :-)

At about 3/4 completion I'd give it top marks, and I'm enjoying it a lot more than the more simulation oriented rally games.

Screenshot for context

 

My work is up and down like a yoyo at the moment, to help avoid doom scrolling during quiet patches I've decided to start reading (nobody at work is going to pay attention to plain text on my screen, we're all in the same boat).

I've got a copy of Naomi Altman's The Power to start off with ... any other recommendations?

(Obviously can't be anything smutty or very funny because I need to be low-key, and lighter stuff would be easier to pick up and put down when I have actual work to do)

Thanks in advance :-)

 

Hi, Iḿ not in the US, but earlier this year had the opportunity to try shooting firearms of various sorts for the first time, and it's something I'd like expand my knowledge about ... when I go on youtube the videos I've seen have been American with a right-wing lean which range from comedic, through surreal, and into creepy.

It would be nice to see content from people who are vaguely normal.

(Edit: especially if it has to do with revolvers!)

 

Are there any other shows out there of this sort of lighthearted nature, yet made with quality writing, out there?

It feels like a lot of recent things we've watched has been a bit grim and/or relies on spectacle rather than telling a good story and working a few jokes in along the way ... the world is on fire, I'd like to stop it and get off, if only for a few minutes at a time.

view more: next ›