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… and two hours before me.
… and two hours before me.
Subscribe.
I count myself lucky if I’m not Russian to the bathroom.
I eat most of Turkey every November.
Illegal in Wisconsin: the dairy state. Perhaps they know something we all should know. Perhaps we should follow suit.
Kids was fucked.
Upvote for using decimated correctly and also being spot on with the math. Made me completely forget about what an ass-hat Musk is for a short time.
Nice try ChatGPT! You sly dog!
Soooo … acid. Yum.
I use Thunderbird on a Debian desktop and a client on my phone Fairmail https://email.faircode.eu/
Ah, yes. Easily adoptable by coworkers + low repeatability = no need to change. Stick with spreadsheets.
Tale as old as time. I’ll just leave this here: https://genius.com/Tool-hooker-with-a-penis-lyrics
I agree that spreadsheet use in engineering is one of the most complicated use cases, but I submit for your consideration another very complicated use case: laboratory software ( https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laboratory_information_management_system ) LIMS do what Excel can but with the added benefits of being more controlled, secure, user friendly and faster because they’re built upon the back of a modern database. In my experience with engineer built worksheets, the engineer that built them is typically the only one who knows how to use them. This is job security for that engineer, but isn’t scaleable for others’ use. In the lab software, a scientist builds the methods, and lab technicians use those methods over and over again daily. Each step of each use of the method is recorded with the inputs, the results, who performed it and exactly when. The workflows are built-in and the calculations are comparable to those used in engineering.
If an Excel sheet is that big, it should be replaced with a proper database, which most likely would run on Linux. I think you’re right, though, about the lack of planning around the practicalities.
I promote Brother because HP is so so bad. Product, business model, service. So bad. I want to save others from the nightmare of dealing with HP. I willingly exchanged my money for a good and service: a Brother printer. The $4 bil company didn’t raid my village and burn my house down. They offered me a printer at a reasonable price and I’m tired of pretending otherwise. So: Team Brother!
Team Brother!
Sounds a bit like Stoic philosophy. https://dailystoic.com/9-core-stoic-beliefs/ Number 6 and 9 specifically.
Holy crap. TIL https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amal_Clooney