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fake-name commented on Carefully Educated to Be Idiots   hilarylayne.com/p/very-ca... · Posted by u/DavidPiper
Avicebron · 2 months ago
"In our dream, we have limitless resources, and the people yield themselves with perfect docility to our molding hand. The present educational conventions fade from our minds; and, unhampered by tradition, we work our own good will upon a grateful and responsive rural folk. We shall not try to make these people or any of their children into philosophers or men of learning or of science. We are not to raise up from among them authors, orators, poets, or men of letters. We shall not search for embryo great artists, painters, musicians. Nor will we cherish even the humbler ambition to raise up from among them lawyers, doctors, preachers, politicians, statesmen, of whom we now have ample supply." - Frederick T. Gates (The Country School of To-Morrow)
fake-name · 2 months ago
Maybe include the next part?

It goes:

> We shall not search for embryo great artists, painters, musicians. Nor will we cherish even the humbler ambition to raise up from among them lawyers, doctors, preachers, politicians, statesmen, of whom we now have ample supply. We are to follow the admonitions of the good apostle, who said, ''Mind not high things, but condescend to men of low degree." And generally, with respect to these high things, all that we shall try to do is just to create presently about these country homes an atmosphere and conditions such, that, if by chance a child of genius should spring up from the soil, that genius will surely bud and not be blighted.

It's almost like you're using a deliberately malicious selective quote that completely changes what the author is trying to say.

fake-name commented on Carefully Educated to Be Idiots   hilarylayne.com/p/very-ca... · Posted by u/DavidPiper
fake-name · 2 months ago
Author is a quack. There is deliberate mis-quoting in the article that completely warps the source material.

From their quoted section:

> We shall not try to make these people or any of their children into philosophers or men of learning or of science. We are not to raise up from among them authors, orators, poets, or men of letters. We shall not search for embr}-o great artists, painters, musicians. Nor will we cherish even the humbler ambition to raise up from among them lawyers, doctors, preachers, politicians, statesmen, of whom we now have ample supply.

And then the removed section, which effectively negates the (facial) point of the previous statement:

> We are to follow the admonitions of the good apostle, who said, ''Mind not high things, but condescend to men of low degree." And generally, with respect to these high things, all that we shall try to do is just to create presently about these country homes an atmosphere and conditions such, that, if by chance a child of genius should spring up from the soil, that genius will surely bud and not be blighted.

This is a really, REALLY common quote (with the latter part deliberately omitted) in lots of places complaining about the way the US education system works, as well as antigovernment movement people.

I certainly will not claim the US education system isn't broken, but using such a deliberate, malicious out-of-context quote casts a pall over anything else the author has to say, particularly given it's long, storied history in antigovernment propaganda.

fake-name commented on Solar panels + cold = A potential problem   linspyre.com/ecoholics/te... · Posted by u/behnamoh
franciscop · 3 months ago
I was going to comment on the manufacturer's safety margins, but then I found a graph [1] on the variability of voltage vs temperature and it seems to be a lot steeper than I thought/expected, to the point that I'm wondering how these do not require either training or a voltage regulator to install and operate properly:

https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Module-voltage-current-v...

fake-name · 3 months ago
They do!

Basically anything that consumes solar power incorporates what's called a "MPPT", or maximum power point tracker.

Basically, it's a smart DC-DC converter that continually tracks the voltage/current output of a solar panel and adjusts the load to extract the maximum available power from the panel.

It's not uncommon to have issues with extremely high panel voltages in snowy climates, when they're first illuminated in the morning. If you are close to the maximum voltage your MPPT charger can handle in normal circumstances, extreme cold can even damage things during the initial morning transient. You then have to do oddball things like use a crowbar system to prevent blowing up your MPPT system.

(see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximum_power_point_tracking )

fake-name commented on     · Posted by u/giardini
fake-name · 3 months ago
A.K.A. "The UK's stupid legislation is going to prevent anyone from using non-locally-hosted services, let's try to get in on the ground floor and have a position like amazon in the US."
fake-name commented on So You Bought a Fancy Vintage Car. Now Who's Going to Restore It?   bloomberg.com/news/featur... · Posted by u/toomuchtodo
fake-name · 4 months ago
> “Younger kids do not have the same work ethic,” says RM’s Morreau. The immediate satisfaction normalized by cell phones and social media is antithetical to the know-how required for fabricating, say, the burled walnut dashboard of a pre-war Rolls-Royce.

Oooooor, the pay is crap and the work environment is abusive.

Any time someone trots out the "kids don't have the same work ethic" argument, they can immediately be ignored. People have been literally saying that continuously since people have been around to write the complaint down, and it's been exactly as true then as it is now.

fake-name commented on An engineer's perspective on hiring   jyn.dev/an-engineers-pers... · Posted by u/pabs3
atomicnumber3 · 4 months ago
Forgive me, I'm a Java programmer.

The glaring bug here is that ptr is - or rather the object being pointed to is - on the heap and allocated in the constructor, but the deconstructor doesn't free it?

fake-name · 4 months ago
- ptr isn't declared in the class body

- ptr is not being deallocated in the destructor

(personal preference - use of class member without explicit `this->`)

fake-name commented on Caligra Workbench   caligra.com/workbench/... · Posted by u/phanimahesh
garciansmith · 4 months ago
I was confused by the command symbols, since most Linux distros use the ctrl/alt/super terms. But they have some hardware too with integrated keyboard (do any other desktop computers do that anymore?). The custom keyboard layout is both interesting and kinda awful (biggest escape key I've ever seen).
fake-name · 4 months ago
It looks like they're trying to be "linux for apple ex-pats".
fake-name commented on When Flatpak's Sandbox Cracks   linuxjournal.com/content/... · Posted by u/dxs
fake-name · 5 months ago
Flatpak, Snap, appimage, etc...

I have pretty fastidiously avoided ever using any of the "package everything into the image" projects, and my life has been considerably better off.

All these things serve to do is make the developer experience easier, at the cost of delivering a much worse user experience.

I can't think of any reason a user would ever prefer packaged variant of something.

fake-name commented on Airbnb allowed rampant price gouging following L.A. fires, city attorney alleges   latimes.com/california/st... · Posted by u/miguelazo
legitster · 5 months ago
Host here. Almost nobody sets prices manually. You either use Airbnb's pricing algorithm, or one from a third party. Either way it's set automatically based on local occupancy rates/hotel prices/etc.

Which is an argument that this is not truly gouging - there's just a demand surge and a supply crunch and the market responds the same way as if it was a business conference in town.

Another thing worth pointing out is that the market of available Airbnbs clears out from the cheaper units first. So it may look like prices are shooting up, but really it's just that all the normal priced ones are gone.

fake-name · 5 months ago
Uh, you are describing gouging, you've just handed it off to an algorithm so you can pretend it's not exactly what it is.
fake-name commented on How to run an Arduino for years on a battery (2021)   makecademy.com/arduino-ba... · Posted by u/thunderbong
whatever1 · 5 months ago
Maybe there are specialized microcontrollers that just efficiently sleep and wake up other microcontrollers?
fake-name · 5 months ago
The ATmega328 (i.e. arduino without the garbage) is that microprocessor.

It can sleep and only use ~66 microamps at 5V with the watchdog timer enabled. That's 330 microwatts. A 1000 mA lithium cell (3.6 watt-hours) could then run it for ~10909 hours, or 454 days (~1 1/3 years).

Almost every microprocessor made these days has some sort of low-power sleep. The ATmega series aren't even particularly good at being low-power.

Of course, you then realize the "arduino" is really just a badly designed development board for an atmega, and they went and used cheap voltage regulators that have an idle current consumption of > 1 mA, and give up on the whole project.

u/fake-name

KarmaCake day1983January 7, 2014View Original