Talk nerdy to me :D

  • @Perspectivist@feddit.uk
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    07 months ago

    I’ve come to the conclusion that if you’re buying tools, you should go for the sets. Take a socket set, for example. Realistically, you’re probably using the ratchet, an extension, and three to four sockets the most. At some point the cheap ratchet breaks and you replace it with a high-quality one. You may also lose or break a few of the most commonly used sockets and replace them with high-quality ones. In ten years you’ll have a set with a high-quality wrench and a few high-quality sockets that you commonly use, plus the rest of the other sizes you’ll only touch once every few years.

    Had you gone for the high-quality set right away, you would have paid even more - and now you’d have a 4mm made-in-Japan socket you spent 10 euros on that you’ll never use.

    • Mike D.
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      07 months ago

      I guess I am a tool nerd as well. Currently live in a tiny studio and have no driveway. Have a tool box as tall as me plus a LOT of cordless tools.

      My socket sets and wrench sets are old USA made Craftsman stuff I’ve had for over at least 30 years.

      I still have a few of the old Craftsman USA screwdrivers. Most have disappeared.

    • @ouRKaoS@lemmy.today
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      07 months ago

      I’ve stood by the philosophy of buying cheap tools and replacing what breaks with better quality.

      The proliferation of 10000 different battery standards has made this a little more difficult recently, but it still works most of the time.

      • Mike D.
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        07 months ago

        Pick one of the battery ecosystems and carry on. I bought a Ryobi starter set about 20 years ago when they were still using NiCad batteries. They switched to lithium ion batteries but kept the connector the same. I bought the new style batteries when my old batteries died. All the old tools work the same.

        I believe Makita and DeWalt follow the same philosophy.

        Harbor freight does not.

        • @3abas@lemmy.world
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          07 months ago

          This is antithetical to the original proposition.

          I bought a Ryobi sander with its battery and charger for $20 at a garage sale to do one small job, I have a bunch of Makita tools and batteries but it would be completely foolish to buy a new Makita sander for one job.

          I have a greenworks battery system and love my electric lawn mower, but when the stupid edger finally broke, I didn’t buy the same stupid tool that takes a giant 4AH battery because I’m tied into the system, I bought a lightweight Makita edger that shares the battery with my drill driver.

          When I need cheap battery tools for one job, I buy Ryobi. When I’m upgrading, it’s probably Makita.

          When I needed to cut down a few damaged trees, I bought a wired chainsaw and a long extension cable.

          If I just stuck to Makita because I have that battery system, I’d be sitting on thousands of dollars in Makita tools I’ll use once a year at most.

  • @AreaKode@lemmy.world
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    07 months ago

    Arduino, ESP32, smart home automation. I could talk for hours. I’ve started to get into PCB design this year, and I’ve had a lot of fun with it!

    • @Xaphanos@lemmy.world
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      07 months ago

      Where can I learn how to link different tech through HA? Insteon switch to flip a wifi bulb. Z Wave switch to open the Shelly relay for the garage door. ZigBee water sensor trips insteon siren. Etc. Is that all YAML? Is the Ecobee thermostat worth it?

      • @AreaKode@lemmy.world
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        07 months ago

        Just install HA and try it out! It’s a lot easier to do than you might think. Every vendor or connection type has its own Integration. Most integrations can be set up through the UI very easily. I have dozens of integrations.

        And the automations have had a lot of work the last few years. They are getting much easier to set up in the UI without having to worry about code or yaml.

  • @zloubida@sh.itjust.works
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    07 months ago

    Typewriters. I love these machines, and the effect they had on our societies, and how they still have a strong influence on our keyboards and typographical likes.

    And they are beautiful.

  • Mister Neon
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    07 months ago

    Aztecs.

    Mixtec-Pueblo culture before European contact was vibrant, dynamic, and layered. It was reflected by its surrounding cultures of K’iche’ (Mayan), Chichimeca, Iréchikwa (Purepecha), and Otomi. Their books look like comics painted on accordions. I’ve been to Teotihuacan so I’ve seen the massive pyramids the peoples of the valley built millennia ago. I’ve read about how cities were planned and zoned then built with stone and you can still witness the logic behind those decisions today. The comida is good too.

    I wish I was smart so I could learn Spanish easier.

    • massive_bereavement
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      07 months ago

      On the words of Hernan Cortés: “Su casa es mi casa.”

      Jokes aside, I am positive a Game of Thrones or Vikings-like tv show based on the birth of the Mexicas, then the expansion with finally the fall of the Aztecs would be brutally fantastic.

      I always look at the Mexican flag in awe for what it really means and how it became.

      Any books that you would recommend but aren’t academic?

  • @ProfessorScience@lemmy.world
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    07 months ago

    Aperiodic tilings! Just a couple of years ago someone discovered a single tile (down from the set of ~20000 that was first used to prove that aperiodic tiling was even possible) that can completely cover an infinite plane without ever falling into a repeating pattern.

    • @Eheran@lemmy.world
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      07 months ago

      The use of “aperiodic” is somewhat loose here compared to what I would expect. Like… I can instantly see several places with the same pattern just on that small sample…

      • @ProfessorScience@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Aperiodic, in this sense, doesn’t mean that there aren’t any bits that repeat. In fact, if you pick any patch of tiles of any arbitrary size, that patch will be repeated infinitely many times. What it means to be aperiodic is that if you slide the whole tiling over so that one of the patches aligns with the repeated bit, there will still be something outside the patch that doesn’t align. Compare that with, say, a repeating grid of squares, where if you slide one square onto a different square then everything lines up, all the way to infinity; it’s impossible to tell that it’s been slid over.

  • Hemingways_Shotgun
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    07 months ago

    Old mechanical things.

    The Japanese have a myth called tsukomogami. It’s the idea that things get a soul after 100 years.

    And while I don’t believe that’s technically true, per se. It’s fundamentally based on something that I adore, and that’s the fact that mechanical things all age individually and that it’s something that we’ve lost with modern technology.

    My go to examples are always typewriters and vintage camera lenses.

    Each typewriter will age differently. Different keys will become sticky, it’ll become misaligned in different places. They develop individual personalities as they get older. So much so that forensics can actually pinpoint when a specific typewriter typed a specific note.

    In terms of camera lenses it’s much the same thing. Different lenses will wear differently depending on what aperture/focal length, etc… that the photographer uses most often. Mold and discolouration between the glass elements will eventually form a unique look to a specific lense.

    It’s magical (to me) and something that I am sad that we are losing with modern consumer technology based on on “throw it away and get a new one”.

    Sorry. Longer than I intended. But you asked for it.

    • @BurntWits@sh.itjust.works
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      07 months ago

      I’m super into mechanical watches for the reasons mentioned. Quartz (battery operated), not so much. But I’ve got a growing collection of mechanical watches and they’re some of my favourite possessions. Not because they’re flashy and make me look rich or whatever but because of the mechanisms inside.

  • @Denjin@feddit.uk
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    07 months ago

    Korean cooking, specifically their use of fermented and preserved food and how it relates to their climate of very hot summers and very cold winters and also their history as tributary state to Ming China and later under Japanese occupation.

  • YappyMonotheist
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    7 months ago

    Western philosophy/existentialism and Scripture, but the former makes people feel insecure/bored and the latter is a sensitive topic. I’ll nerd out about Dune too, and whoever has read the series will understand my interest. 😅

  • @mongooseofrevenge@lemmy.world
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    07 months ago

    Pens

    Its such a common thing that we’ve all used and have opinions. And the rabbit hole goes as deep as you want.

    You’re good with a Bic and shitty notebook paper? Cool. You have a $3,000 custom built fountain pen that’s been handcrafted to fit your grip and is based on a sketch you made from a dream with a 21k gold nib? Also cool.

    • anon6789
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      07 months ago

      Once I found the plethora of good but >$10 pens, I had a lot of fun. The Precise V5 is one of my fav, and at the job I had where people would frequently need to borrow my pen, that received steady unprompted compliments.

    • silly goose meekah
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      07 months ago

      Honestly, regarding ballpoint pens, I’ve never used anything that beats bic. They write so smoothly and they just work on anything. I even use them to write my name on the plastic labels of water bottles at my job

      • @mongooseofrevenge@lemmy.world
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        07 months ago

        Ya ballpoints are really the workhorse of the pen world. Even with all the advancements in writing tech, a standard ballpoint will always get the job done. I have Fisher space pen refills in a few of my work pens because I know they will always write whenever and wherever I need them.

        These days there is a pretty good consensus around the Uni Jetstream as the “best writing” ballpoint ink. Its a hybrid oil-based ink formulation with lubricants that really flows. Other brands have started to get on the hybrid wagon too so it’s been great for budget pens all around.

      • anon6789
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        07 months ago

        If one is only going to have one pen, any model of Jetstream ballpoint is a nice cheap upgrade you won’t be too upset to lose.

    • @DontNoodles@discuss.tchncs.de
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      7 months ago

      I have a tin box full of very old nibs which still look pristine. I bought them on impulse at a flea market dirt cheap. I have no idea what to do with them.

      The tin box

      The whole set

      It is basically these three types of nibs

  • @Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    Rucking, lifting, Wing Chun, Star Citizen, Stoicism (the og version). I try not to monologue too much on them but it takes restraint.

  • @DaniNatrix@leminal.space
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    07 months ago

    Fabrics, pattern drafting, and sewing techniques. Historical clothing and corsetry. History, soooo much history. Religious movements, belief systems, and paradigms. Language, writing, and literature. Plants and gardening. Birds and bugs. Tea and tisanes. Houses, their interior systems and construction, renovating them, maintaining them, and hacking their unique quirks and issues.

  • Harmonious
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    07 months ago

    Characters. I love designing characters and doing a deep dive into who they are and why they’re designed the way they are. For example, I did one recently about a girl who is a mechanist in my Victorian modern world who works on robots and airship but likes to go to a dance club at night. She keeps her goggles from work since they’re seen as fashion in this world and wears a distinctive hair clip that was given as a gift to her from someone dear to her before the war. And, then there’s another guy I did that is basic rich kid egotistical. Looks like and ultra Chad and has the dance moves to show for it. Basically, he’s like the ultra Chad meme in this world.