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[-] otherbarry@lemmy.zip 11 points 3 weeks ago

For me it was fine, maybe about 15 years ago. Small startup company I was at ran out of funding, we got something like 1-2 months severance. We all got along fine so it wasn't like everyone hated the job or the owners, sometimes startup companies just don't make it through those first few years.

Summer is probably the best time to be unemployed, spent a lot of time exploring my neighborhood during the weekday afternoons and was practicing making cold brew & other summer drinks LOL.

Was doing freelance work while being on unemployment / looking for a new steady job. Think it was about 4-5 months before I landed a new job (did get 1-2 job offers during that time but was maybe being a bit picky & turned them down).

... Also helps that I keep savings so short term unemployment won't wreck me. I've seen posts about people being out of work for years, that would be a far worse scenario.

[-] otherbarry@lemmy.zip 2 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago)

When you carry it by the handle it’s so long that it may scratch the ground

Always assumed that's a short person problem. Source: Am short, same thing happens to me.

Maybe there's a better way to deal with that but what I usually do is add a knot to each handle so the handles are shorter, that way the bags are higher from the ground.

That's when using re-usable grocery bags/totes with long handles.

[-] otherbarry@lemmy.zip 8 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Agreed, though I've found that usually dousing a fly in water (via spray bottle) is enough to surprise them & get them to drop. Once they've fallen it takes them a bit to dry themselves & get airborne again, that's usually enough time to swat it and finish the job.

That works well if you just have one or a few flies - if you've got a ton of them fly paper is going to work much better.

[-] otherbarry@lemmy.zip 3 points 1 month ago

Yup agree with you there, Tabasco sauces are great. Not sure that I'd call their Sriracha an actual alternative vs the original Sriracha sauce but aside from that there's nothing wrong with their version.

I do like that they didn't add a ton of extra ingredients to their version, simple ingredient list = better IMO.

[-] otherbarry@lemmy.zip 3 points 1 month ago

If any of my nearby supermarkets carried it I'd definitely give this one a go. Not sure that I want to commit to buying multiple bottles online.

[-] otherbarry@lemmy.zip 7 points 1 month ago

Maybe not the Tabasco Sriracha if you're looking for that Sriracha flavor. It's not bad at all but it basically tastes like Sriracha flavored Tabasco sauce. That could be a good thing, there are a ton of Tabasco sauce devotees out there, just don't expect it to taste like a proper Sriracha sauce.

A lot of these alternative Sriracha brands seem to have a ton of extra ingredients vs the original which puts me off from buying them.

[-] otherbarry@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

That sounds pretty typical, didn't know they used to not charge for a residential pickup.

To be fair businesses that have a FedEx / UPS account and have regularly scheduled pickups do get charged for that. It's one of the items buried in the bills you get from them every week (can't remember offhand if the pickup fee is a weekly or monthly charge). Maybe the high volume businesses get it for free, not too sure.

I'd expect USPS to do the same but don't have any direct experience with their billing.

Where I work we have a similar situation, we sometimes have prepaid FedEx labels but no regular FedEx pickup so that has to be arranged differently on our end. We could pay FedEx their pickup fee if we wanted but we don't ship FedEx every day so it's kind of a waste of money, and the FedEx drivers would be coming and going without picking anything up most days.

[-] otherbarry@lemmy.zip 6 points 1 month ago

Windows has its default Remote Desktop Connection that uses RDP (Remote Desktop Protocol), once enabled it will listen on port 3389. It is pretty solid and has a few features beyond VNC. Just be careful, you probably don't want to open that port onto the internet since every port scanner is scanning that port & looking for unpatched Windows vulnerabilities or insecure user/password logins.

I use RDP myself for my Windows system but I need to SSH into my network before using it, so it's really RDP over SSH. If you're not going to go through all that at the very least change the port to something else so it doesn't get port scanned to death.

.. TBH if you're not too sure about how to secure this stuff maybe Chrome Remote Desktop is the best option, at least it's secured behind your own Google account (hopefully that itself is secure and you have 2FA enabled).

[-] otherbarry@lemmy.zip 6 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

RDP is kind of limited

It’s useful if you only need to do stuff while you’re actively connected but you can’t, for example, remote in and start an app or process going and then disconnect and have that app continue.

Sure you can, I do this all the time on the work RDP server. Maybe you need to tweak your group policy so it doesn't kick you out right away.

When you d/c your profile is essentially logged out.

Nope, depends on what group policy you configured. If you've never configured that before as a starter launch gpedit.msc (with admin privileges) and head to Administrative Templates / Windows Components / Remote Desktop Services / Remote Desktop Session Host / Session Time Limits. The other settings in there are also useful for other things you may want to configure.

Your activity also can’t be viewed by a user on the remote system, if you needed to collaborate or assist somehow.

Yes this is true, the only way to do that is to have admin privileges on the host and then take over that user session. But of course that's not collaboration, that's just you taking a user's current session without them being able to see what you're doing.

On Windows the official way to do that is via Quick Assist (on Windows 10, not sure if it got renamed on Windows 11), it's sort of a shared RDP session where both the user and the remote user can share the same session. I've never needed to use it myself - with the work system users are pretty content with just having me "fix" whatever they needed without them watching, they usually don't care how to fix the problem themselves LOL.

[-] otherbarry@lemmy.zip 10 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

VNC is the kind of the baseline remote desktop that works on pretty much any operating system. You can start there & then decide if you need specific features that the others have.

You didn't mention your own OS but it too probably already has support for its own remote desktop solution.

[-] otherbarry@lemmy.zip 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Yes of course, I meant as a general idea of what you'd aim to do lacking any other information beyond the fact that the bomb itself fell in the local downtown area (going by the post itself).

Thing is if a bomb dropped that close most people will not know what the scale of the bomb was, what the design was, how far exactly they were from the blast radius, whether it's ground / atmospheric, wind direction, all that stuff. In that short amount of time you'd just need to run into the nearest still-standing shelter & figure things out from there.

Hopefully with some extreme luck the bomb would fall just as you were walking/driving past your nearest fallout shelter and can easily get in. Or you're a prepper and aren't far from your homemade bunker with supplies, radio, and whatnot.

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otherbarry

joined 1 year ago