scrubbles

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[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 5 points 11 hours ago (2 children)

Stupid question, but what how does this work on deck hardware, I thought framegen was only supported on newer GPUs?

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 37 points 12 hours ago (10 children)

That a lot of non-american food is rebranded to use tacky american names to get people to try it. Too many americans are afraid to try "foreign" food, but will happily try "Cajun Jim's Cornballs". A couple I can think of are Aioli to "Garlic Mayo" and Chicken Satay becoming "Peanut Butter Chicken". Sounds like mm mm good home american cookin' to me, course I'll try some.

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 59 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 13 hours ago) (3 children)

In 2004 and 2007, Landry faced charges of marijuana possession and driving with a suspended license, but he says he’s had no criminal record since then.

Hoo-boy, sounds like he was asking for it, one of them criminals I keep hearing about. Thin blue line, right folks?

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 6 points 13 hours ago (4 children)

Define "looking". They probably have your video, and keep it for 30 days or per some SLA that you signed for nest purposes. Now, I highly doubt anyone is sitting there watching you.

But, running constant analytics on the video feed? Using AI to read any text it sees, grabbing random frames and asking what is in there? That's a whole different story. Storing and watching video is expensive - but analyzing and grabbing data about it is relatively cheap. That can tell them are you home, how many people are home, what is your routine, what's on the TV, etc etc etc. That sort of data is a goldmine for advertisers.

So, they're probably not "watching" or "looking", but they are definitely grabbing data constantly.

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 4 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

This is confirmed btw. I was just fired from a company who hired a new vp who worked in ad tech. Part of the gig was scraping. But how do they get around Ip blocks and so many guardrails?

Easy. They started a sister business that had an extension they gave away for free, some menial task like taking a screenshot or something to dupe people into getting it

And in the piles of ToS it gave the extension the legal ability to grab random websites, scrape them, and send the data home. Now you have a internet wide scraper platform, and best parts is that you can't be up blocked and even better, you aren't paying for compute.

You're very welcome, I hope it helps. Go in ready and confident, you got this. We're all rooting for you!

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 13 points 18 hours ago (3 children)

If people don't want other people hearing or learning about something, it's probably worth learning

he would have said "They're expanding the government to slash the government - just slash the budget!"

I highly highly recommend this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CuuDTnMPMgc

I think you'll like it a lot. I realized that bathos is what I hated about the Last Jedi. They killed so many truly deep moments to have stupid jokes. They couldn't let anything just be serious. It ruined the tone of the movie, couldn't decide if they wanted to be a comedy or a drama, and so they did neither.

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 14 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (3 children)

This will be the main interview. Welcome to software development interviews, where you can have 6 interviews and a take home exam and they still aren't sure if you're worth hiring.

This is what we call the "Loop". I have done too many of these. I did one just yesterday actually! Probably... 15-20 under my belt now throughout my career.

There will be 4 1-hour interviews you will go through. Usually there will be some combination of the following. This is how most of mine go (my mid-tier ones and now my senior ones). They may mix and match them, you may get 2 technicals instead of a system design, maybe they don't do the last one, who knows, but this is to help you prep a bit.

Technical - 1 hour with a sample problem. Chill companies will give you something like "Solve a wordsearch". Maybe they have something premade like "Add some functionality to this". Companies like Amazon will do a more intense leet-code style question. The number one advice I have to you is never stop talking. Be talking the entire time. Every thought you have, verbalize it. The interviewer is not a mind reader, they will be trying to figure out what you're doing, and if you tell them they honestly will probably help you. Just describe everything you're doing. "I'll make a method here because I think it'll be easier to reuse - well.. maybe I won't. Actually I'll keep it and we can use it later, so yeah that'll be what we use to do X functionality". Even if you think you sound silly, it'll really help your chances. Do this for the System Design below too. Worst thing a candidate can do is clam up and not talk in their interview, leaving the interviewer at the end trying to guess if they understood the problem or not.

Culture Fit - Talk about projects you did, since you're coming out of entry level, focus on results. Outcomes. A lot of people ramble in these. Prepare for this interview. Look at your history, find projects, and learn the STAR Method for behavioral. It honestly is a clean way to tell your own history.

System Design - This will heavily change based on your level, and that's okay. Usually it's a question like "Design WhatsApp" or some vague thing like this. They won't expect you to have a perfect answer. Instead, they're looking for you to ask questions and how you think. I strongly recommend watching This video - again they lay out how to organize the interview. Most interviewees just start throwing stuff on a whiteboard - watch the video and learn how to lay out things in an ordered way. Even if you don't know the answer, it shows how you think, which is much more valuable in the interview.

VP/Executive Chat - This will be a fairly informal chat with someone higher up at the company. They are mostly going to lean on the others to decide if you should be hired - but they want to know if you're "excited" to work there. Show an interest in the company. Ask questions about something you heard they were working on. Are they smaller? Are they pushing towards IPO or something else? Show an interest in the business side. Talk about how you want to uplevel your skills and you think X company is the right place.

Bonus - The "Bar Raiser" - This is more of a "style" of interviewing that can happen in any of the mentioned ones above. I was caught off guard the first time I encountered one of these. The Bar Raiser is essentially they're going to push you to see if you "raise the bar" for them, if you go above what a normal employee will do. You'll notice this if you find they are asking a lot of questions, maybe even to the point of offending your or annoying you. This is essentially what they want, how do you do under pressure? How do you do when people are second guessing you? Don't let it get to you, and don't start bullshitting. Admit when you don't know things. Stick to your guns on things you believe in, but admit when you don't know things. Software engineers need to know when they don't know something. When I was younger I insisted that a SQL database would be the best database for a system design. They asked why - and I didn't have an answer. It's just what I had used. What I should have said was "It's what I'm most familiar with, but there are some others I would want to look at first to really make a decision". Since I insisted that it was best, they asked how I would scale it? How would I make sure it wouldn't go down. I quickly realized it wasn't the best choice, and I worked myself into a corner.

Important Notes

  • Ask for a break - you deserve a break between these. If you need to go to the bathroom, make sure there is time for it. You're looking at 4 hours of interviews, most will offer between "Do you need anything" - don't think it's impolite. Just go to the bathroom if you need it.
  • Accept the drink - They'll offer you coffee or water. Just accept it. Again, 4 hours of interviews. You'll need some water. You'll get dry mouth, just trust me.
  • Think about food - Most good ones will provide a lunch... but I'm seeing this less and less. Eat right before going in, nothing heavy or you'll be sleepy, but have a good solid breakfast and eat before you go into the meeting. (Even if they provide lunch then you don't look like a pig on their dime). Pack a snack with you if you can, after one loop I was shaking with hunger and went to the mcdonalds immediately after right next door because I was so hungry.
  • Get a good night's sleep before hand. You'll have to be on the whole time, it's just going to be tiring, physically and mentally.

Alright padawan, that's my advice for you. I wish you all the luck in the world, take what I've learned about these and may my knowledge help you. We're all rooting for you!

Once you start realizing how much space cars and parking lots take up you can't unsee it. A nice fountain, stranded in the middle of parking lots.

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I'm honestly shocked it took this long tbh. It's obviously a liability, the only question is what site is going to be sued into oblivion first, and a lawsuit would name everyone in the chain, from the site hosting it, to the cloud provider with the data on it, to the card processors. Whoever loses will be "made an example of" too, more than likely shuttering the doors of the site.

 

A quick 7-minute short film I found enjoyable about loneliness. Surprised to find a copy online still.

 

"Be Ready for Today" They're so supportive and enthusiastic, and because of this they're killing off most of (maybe all?) of their WeMo line:

But hey, at least we know that they're very appreciative of us, and that they wanted to provide us with simple to use accessories, and that they're proud. Their empty corporate words make up for the pieces of ewaste we now have.

I believe WeMo with a lot of hacking can be controlled locally via a direct IP connection if set up through Home Assistant. It's a pain, and it still requires their app, so maybe try to set it up now before they officially end support. Even without this workaround, it's pure enshittification and Belkin is back on the "Don't ever buy" list.

 
 
 
 

...and you can only opt out with certified mail

(k) Opting Out of Arbitration. You have the right to opt out of binding arbitration within 30 days of the date you first accepted a version of these Terms by sending us notice of your opt out via certified mail addressed to iFIT Inc., Attn: Legal Department, 1500 South 1000 West, Logan, UT 84321. To be effective, the opt-out notice must include your full name, mailing address, email address, and be signed by you. The notice must also clearly indicate your intent to opt out of binding arbitration in order to be valid. By opting out of binding arbitration, you are agreeing to resolve disputes in accordance with Section 23.

 
 

Hey all, I'm hoping this is simple one of you have seen. I have Jellyfin media player installed on bazzite, I use it through gaming mode. Most of the time, but some audio tracks are silent and won't play unless I force transcoding.

They are usually DTS or DTS:MA. Do I need to install drivers somehow? Or flip a setting? I'm fine with transcoding audio, but I want to avoid transcoding video.

I am plugged into an Onkyo receiver via HDMI, so it should be able to play most of those.

Thanks!

 
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