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Hahaha. Ok, I thought you were a young child because you spelled battery differently and your take on everything I said the first time seemed childish. I told you not to touch a car battery because I thought you were a child. I still wouldn’t personally touch it, but that’s not what’s funny. You are NOT an electrical engineer. YOU ARE A STUDENT, lmao, I thought you might be a child and I wasn’t far off.
Your German, correct? I fixed aircraft in Germany, and you are only a student. Ever work on 115 VAC @ 400Hz 3 Phase? Ever work on C-130 avionic systems? What about B-1’s?
There is actually a lot of stuff I miss about Germany, too. Döner Kabob… God I miss those, they were my favorite. Oh and the German ice cream. Also the beer… I miss a good Dunkel.
You know, the sad part about this interaction is that I think we may have been friends, if you didn’t come across so aggressive. A lot of your posts are on a German Arch community, which, well I’m running that with btrfs, snapper, hyprland, and quickshell. I intend to change to cachyos, I rather appreciate their optimized kernel.
Regardless, keep studying you’ll be an electrical engineer soon.
o7
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Do yourself a favor, don’t ever touch a car battery. It will hurt and you will feel it. They show that in movies as torture for a reason. It’s not the voltage in this case, it’s the current. Those batteries are capable of 550 CCA (cold cranking amps). Warm that battery is 685 CA. In fact I think I would consider the car battery more dangerous.
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In alternating current the electrons move back and forth across the material similar to a wave striking the shore of a tropical beach… No one said anything about reflecting. Have you never been shocked by an outlet? Shoot, I grew up in a trailer with a short on the front door. If you touched the metal, it wouldn’t even hurt, but you’d certainly know.
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Theoretically, the building is ground and you only need to connect one cable.
But I’m with you, use AC.
Disagree. DC current will seek the path of least resistance, and will not go down the pole.
I’m unsure if this is an apartment, but I would start by reaching out to the landlord and say your lights have been acting up whenever they are using it. Maybe say your electric bill has been higher, maybe stage that a little bit by simply leaving a light on for a month. Have them inspect the floor damage too.
Once they leave, I would install cannibalize a power cable, plug it into the wall and hook the hot wire up to one of the screws.
The benefit of using AC, is that it is less likely to take the path of least resistance and travels as waves back and forth, doesn’t necessarily matter if they are grounded or not, they will feel it, likely marginally lower since it is also going into everything their 8ft pole is touching.
…I don’t know why I’m on a villain arc this morning.
one_knight_scripting@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Give your Matrix account a Discord UI with CommetEnglish
1·4 days agoSaved for later, will probably try once it publishes to flathub.
one_knight_scripting@lemmy.worldto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•To demonstrate that people will argue about anything, here's a picture of a ladybug.
1·5 days agoUgliest ladybug I’ve ever seen.
one_knight_scripting@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Windows 11 just lost 5% market share in two months despite Windows 10 losing support.English
2·15 days agoI simply didn’t see it that way. Sure, the Linux community doesn’t necessarily agree on which version is the best for new users. But we tend to agree on reliable distros which are good to get started on.
Brand New user? Unless they have a specific task that the PC needs to do, then first priority is reliability. Off the top of my head, Debian is reliable as hell, Ubuntu is about the same and fine but not my preference (very dislike snap proprietary bs that almost no one uses anyways), Fedora is a common use case and while I haven’t used their desktop in a while, I rather like the rhel based distros they are reliable but keep things a little newer than say Debian.
The point is that I disagree with you entirely. You see the choice of distributions as daunting and a scary thing. I don’t. I see the choice as freeing.
It has never mattered to me personally what version of Linux someone is using, or what path they think I should go down, I do my own research for my own purposes and come back with my own options(maybe my 90s rebel inner child still exists). Admittedly, perhaps someone needs more guidance when running away from Microslop and I could help as long as I know what package manager the distro is using.
Now, you also say that Linux isn’t mainstream already? There are entire career fields built on it, why the hell is it not considered mainstream. DevOps typically uses Linux heavily, might be as simple as an install script, or a full k8s deployment. And shoot running docker servers for backing up your files via VPN? What about 25 TB of jellyfin movies/shows. Sorry, but even if not used as a desktop, a Linux server can go a long way and do a ton of good.
one_knight_scripting@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Windows 11 just lost 5% market share in two months despite Windows 10 losing support.English
2·15 days agoStraight up, I got it confused with Pop!_OS. Although I’m too lazy to look it up, my buddy who has been using it for years mentioned looking at other options because of that reason.
one_knight_scripting@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Windows 11 just lost 5% market share in two months despite Windows 10 losing support.English
2·15 days agoHonestly, I’m with you on that one. Debian is reliable, so it send like the safest option. Personally, I use it for my seed box, and I’ve helped others set their own up to. Fedora, on the other hand, introduces package updates a little more frequently and in the long run, I think it’s more enjoyable to work on in a desktop environment.
one_knight_scripting@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Windows 11 just lost 5% market share in two months despite Windows 10 losing support.English
1·15 days agoInteresting, I would love to understand the tooling behind that.
one_knight_scripting@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Windows 11 just lost 5% market share in two months despite Windows 10 losing support.English
1·15 days agoFair. Technically I’m running Windows in a container… But technically that is also a vm.
That is for this neat remote app fella: https://github.com/winapps-org/winapps
Makes it look like Windows applications run on Linux without using full rdp.
one_knight_scripting@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Windows 11 just lost 5% market share in two months despite Windows 10 losing support.English
4·16 days agoActually I want to delete my comment… 22.04 is actually Pop!_OS not Mint. So I’m really dumb there, admittedly, Ubuntu spinoffs get me a little mixed up.
And the work bit, in truth, I think he could fix it by using a btrfs partition, snapper, and grub-btrfs. Build the machine to automatically take snapshots so if someone breaks it, you can fix it faster.
And yeah, ease of use is important, that was not meant as a criticism instead I pointed out a logical reason why Mint made sense.
Long story short, comment stupid, my bad.
one_knight_scripting@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Windows 11 just lost 5% market share in two months despite Windows 10 losing support.English
2·16 days agoI suggest you check out this: https://github.com/ChrisTitusTech/winutil
It is a script to remove a bunch of Microslop… I’m betting on Microsoft re-enabling it unannounced after an update though.
But I’m with you on the Linux bit…
…I use Arch btw…
one_knight_scripting@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Windows 11 just lost 5% market share in two months despite Windows 10 losing support.English
412·16 days agoMint? Based on Ubuntu 22.04? Seems a hint dated.
No offense, I swear. But I have a buddy who has to support Mint installs for work and it honestly sounds horrible.
Then again, the ease of use is probably worth the time saved setting up Arch.
Edit: It is Pop!_OS that is based on Ubuntu 22.04 not Mint. Ubuntu spinoffs spun me through a loop.
Nope, you are right, I was not familiar with the resistance of the human body and I was wrong.