chrash0

joined 1 year ago
[–] chrash0@lemmy.world 1 points 10 hours ago

yeah it does seem like i need to dive deeper into the manual and get some better diagnostics

[–] chrash0@lemmy.world 1 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) (1 children)

it was connected to hot water when i moved in; i simply left it that way. i’ll definitely give the manual another look to see if that’s configured correctly.

it does pump at least some water as the dishes come out wet. they come out fairly wet too, which was another signal that maybe the water wasn’t hot enough.

ETA: the manual does specify it should be hooked up to hot water

[–] chrash0@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

yeah i did turn up the temp on the heater. i’m 99% sure the correct line is hooked up. i checked it earlier today, but at this point i’m willing to entertain the idea i’m reading that wrong.

insulation is an idea i hadn’t thought of, although i’m not sure how much exposed line i can access.

phone in a ziplock is an interesting idea for sure! i happen to have some old Android devices from work that would be great for this.

i appreciate the response 🙏

 

hey! i don’t particularly want to post on Reddit, and i just found this community. hopefully there’s someone here who can help.

don’t let me jump to a conclusion here (the good ole X/Y problem we call it in software).

i recently moved into a new house, and my dishwasher’s performance has been next to useless. the first weekend i moved in it had a leak detected so i took the opportunity to take the whole mfer all the way apart and clean the filter and check all the guts. (i ended up removing the sensor completely cuz the false positives were driving me nuts; also this experience made me start distrusting the machine itself)

after this, the residue from the detergent went away, but it wasn’t cleaning anything that wasn’t just something i could rinse off in the sink. i ran dishes through 3, 4, 5, 6 times. in the meantime i started pre-heating my water before starting the machine, based on advice from this Technology Connections video. finally today i hand washed most of the dishes so i could use the dishwasher cleaner i bought.

the dishwasher cleaner was this product: “Finish Dual Action Dishwasher Cleaner: Fight Grease and Limescale, 1 Count”. the idea being if there is some excess lime built up the pressure may not be adequate. the way it’s meant to work (i assume) is you remove a sticker to expose a wax plug that is melted by the heat of the water during the cycle. i set the dishwasher to the most intense setting: heavy wash, extra hot, sanitize. took the thing 3 hours to complete the cycle. i come back, and the wax plug is 100% intact. thus the conclusion: the water isn’t getting hot enough during the cycle even with preheating. based on this i’m assuming that my water line is simply too long for such a modern machine, which (assuming based on the video) is trying to minimize water waste and not sampling enough hot water to get up to normal operating temperature.

the reviews of the machine seem positive, and negative reviews don’t indicate this as a normal issue regarding the effectiveness of the machine.

hope someone can help, because it’s currently an overpriced drying rack for my hand washed dishes.

it’s the Samsung DW80K5050

here’s the manual for the model: https://downloadcenter.samsung.com/content/UM/201610/20161012093615322/DW7000KM-02025B-01_EN_CFR.pdf

[–] chrash0@lemmy.world 37 points 1 day ago (4 children)

without checking, Gates’ wealth is probably tied up in a lot of MS stock, and he could probably walk into the office and ask the intern to get him a coffee. but yeah i think mostly retired.

Linus is still active is maintaining the Linux kernel.

and yes, this is fluff, not some kind of summit

[–] chrash0@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago

ah that makes sense

[–] chrash0@lemmy.world 42 points 2 days ago (1 children)

eh Bill doesn’t really pull any levers at MS these days, and Linus already got the moral victory of the Linux kernel running on Windows and basically powering their entire cloud business.

[–] chrash0@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago (3 children)

fuckin weird that an extension would inject invalid JSON into an API payload. if you’re gonna make a shady plugin at least test it lol

anyway, if that’s truly the issue i’d be worried about what my extensions were doing, personally.

[–] chrash0@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago (5 children)

i would start by seeing what the actually API response is. i haven’t used OpenWebUI, but to me this looks like some kind of error response from the server. you could use an API tester like Bruno. also check your Ollama logs to see if it’s getting the request and any other output there.

[–] chrash0@lemmy.world 15 points 1 week ago

if you really want to stick it to Google you have to go for Firefox or something derived from it. Chromium gives Google a ton of leverage to push features to all of their downstreams. not sure what engine these are using, but i also prefer to use Firefox because it’s open source. if these were open source you could easily see which engine they’re using.

[–] chrash0@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

wow i had no idea development had stalled by this much. we are just now evaluating allocators for our Rust cloud services, and there are a lot of tribal debates between jemalloc and mimalloc with little to biased evaluation. i’m curious what a sufficient analysis even looks like

[–] chrash0@lemmy.world 5 points 2 weeks ago (7 children)

pretty scant on details. what is this doing for me that Podman or Containerd aren’t? “oPtIMizeD fOR aPPlE SiLICon” is fluff

[–] chrash0@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

nushell has replaced all such tools for me. it’s so nice to have a shell environment and structured data parser with a common language interface. once you load the data into nushell it’s trivial to use the same query language you’d use for YAML or JSON or TOML or XML or CSV or your company’s bespoke language that you wrote a parser for in 30 minutes. that plus all the other tooling like a math engine and tools like date humanize and having a modern scripting language and so much more. i can’t recommend nushell enough for people who work with lots of structured data, whether that’s logs or datasets or config files or whatever.

 

howdy everyone!

i’ve been trying to diversify my fitness routine, and i live in a bicycle town with lots of great trails (so they tell me). i’m wanting to get into gravel biking because i have too much to live for to get smashed by a car or modify my collar bone with a tree (jk y’all are cool i’m just a wuss).

one thing i really enjoy is the data part of my workouts, but i’m increasingly wary of putting my data into walled gardens like Apple Fitness or even Strava to a certain extent. and i have the technical know-how to store and curate my own data if needed (4 years as a professional Android developer and 15 years of programming experience). i’ve been advised to get a cycling computer, but many of my friends aren’t so technical and just grab whatever “Garmin” they can afford. and the folks at the shops will have little knowledge of underlying OS versions or chipsets or whatever.

so i wanted to reach out to the nerdiest cycling community i could think of and ask about it. i know gadgets in niche spaces can be kind of a wasteland in terms of open source or open API access or whatever, but is there such a device that’s hacker friendly? i don’t need another shitty smartphone strapped to my bike, but i also don’t want to miss any fun data collection features like power delivery (once i fully build out my kit; i’m building this out piecemeal).

any advice would be appreciated 🙏

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