• BonesOfTheMoon@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    There is a branch of medicine called functional neurology, where people get symptoms that present like seizures, tremors, or even paraplegia, but they have no physical cause, they’re usually a sign of pretty difficult trauma history. It’s honestly awful and I feel so bad for them, you end up in ER thinking you have epilepsy and some ignorant ER doctor treats you like you’re malingering but you absolutely are not, the symptoms are very real and compelling, and sometimes you can’t tell if it’s epileptic or not and it requires a lot of testing. Some people have both epileptic and nonepileptic seizures. It’s really tough and there’s very little treatment available. They are not harmful to you physically at all, but they’re quite distressing and I feel terrible for people who have them.

  • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    Working with electricity is actually quite simple in a lot of respects, and I make a lot of money mainly because people are afraid of it (and rightfully so, me too). But many of the small things like changing plugs/switches out and hanging fixtures can be done easily by anyone with a basic knowledge hand tool use and basic rules like a) turn off the main if you don’t know which breaker you’re working with, b) check that it’s off with a meter or hot stick, c) even then, don’t directly touch the shiny parts, and d) match your colors exactly as you found them (take pictures to be safe). Granted I’ve been doing this for 10+ years, but even a layman can save themselves a service call with a couple basics and YouTube is a great resource for such things.

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      My favorite electrical tip is swapping the capacitor in your AC when it stops working. $12 on Amazon. $175 for a service call. I keep a spare.

      • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        Better yet, having a (halfway decent) multimeter and knowing how to use it is huge. A good one can test capacitance, but simply tracing voltage isn’t too tricky.

  • callouscomic@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    Millions of government employees work hard every day on so much shit you’ll never see or understand that does in fact make your life so much nicer than you deserve when you complain about government workers.

    And I’m NOT talking about the cultic worshipped military. I’m talking civilian civil servants at all levels of government.

    SOME people are really gonna wonder why everything’s getting shittier and never make the connection that their idiotic notions about government led to it.

    • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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      1 month ago

      I have some gov contracts and I can confirm this.

      Also: the big complaint about working with gov is either apparently expensive stuff and/or apparently slow progress .

      Reality? We as citizens require a crazy amount of justified checking and validation from every part of gov because it affects people’s lives that things take longer and cost more to do right … and many times that to back out a fuck-up and not kill anyone. (Oh Hi Elon)

  • Norin@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Academia, USA.

    You’re getting the exact same quality of education for introductory classes at a community college, state school, and private school.

    I know because I teach the same suite of classes at all 3 as an adjunct. Same book, same syllabus, same schedule, same assignments. The only difference is the price tag, and I’m hardly alone in that.

    Actually, scratch that. You’re getting a better education at the community college because the people in charge there bother to remember that I exist and treat me as an equal.

    • SwingingTheLamp@midwest.social
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      1 month ago

      I got degrees from both a community college and a major research university. The two don’t share instructors, but on average, the quality is much better at the community college.

      Community college instructors are there to teach. They go to continuing education classes to learn how to do it better. Some classes at a research university are taught by similar, dedicated instructors, but some are taught by the professor who drew the metaphorical short straw that semester, and who’d rather be focusing on her research. She will put in her best effort, don’t get me wrong, but her first priority is research.

      That is to say, for anyone thinking about a degree, don’t overlook the value of community college.

      (ETA: I work at a research university now; the research professors who also teach are some of my co-workers.)

  • Rhaedas@fedia.io
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    1 month ago

    This is common knowledge by now I think, and yet evidence shows common doesn’t mean people remember. If you ship anything, fragile or not, be sure to pack it like it’s going to be thrown, dropped, get wet, and stepped on. It’s not even that workers in shipping do this (most damage is usually either bad packaging or mechanical damage in the automated parts), but things happen between point A and point B, many of them unavoidable. And I see SO MANY packages that consist of just some thin cardboard with a few pieces of tape, or a plastic bag that’s easily torn, or documents/letters that are smaller than the label we put on them(??? That won’t get lost :/ )

    Pack things like you want to to make it there. Just look at packages you get successfully, and I guarantee on many you’ll see marks of the war zone they went through. Now imagine if they had been sent with an old worn out box you found in the garage and threw some tape on and didn’t bother putting any protective packing inside because “it’ll be fine if it bounces around a bit”.

  • LockheedTheDragon@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Financial institutions are not as secure as you think.

    Every once in a while I will see someone ask “We bank online why can’t we vote online?” Banking is secure enough that the money the banks lose is less than the money they make. Also not all lose of funds will hurt the bank if the individual is scammed, since individuals are supposed to keep their accounts secure and not fall for scams.

    Your bank is using old technology and Excel for a lot of internal records keeping. Most fraud detection is a cost to the bank not a money maker. Stopping money laundering, human trafficking, ect means the bank doesn’t get that money and has to pay people to investigate it and shudder report to the government.

    Like almost every other business out there they work off of poorly made or old tech and the lowest paid people are push to more work with less time and resources.

  • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 month ago

    When I worked in local television news, people would probably be shocked about how frank and open newscasters often were during commercial breaks. We got direct satellite feeds of the national newscasts, and they didn’t mute the mics or turn off cameras during breaks. We got to still see and hear them while local commercials ran.

    I remember Katie Couric going off about a bunch of dumb shit during commercial breaks. I especially remember her being a demented cheerleader for the War on Terror, especially behind the scenes.

    There used to be a video of her cutting a Native American historian from a special on Columbus Day and saying “what does he know about Columbus anyway?” after chiding him for having negative things to say about Columbus. Since they were short on time, they made the decision to cut him from the program. I’m having trouble finding it now.

    The 1995 film Spin is made entirely from direct satellite feeds from between commercial breaks. It was specifically about the 1992 election and how both Republicans and Democrats “massaged the message” with the news media, but watching it you’ll get an idea of how it works, because a lot of the clips are from commercial breaks. (The video I mentioned about Couric and the historian might even be in this film, it’s been a while since I’ve seen it).

    Mediaburn has a copy of the film to watch on their website.

    https://mediaburn.org/video/spin/

  • thisbenzingring@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 month ago

    In IT the first problem/question should always this:

    Is it a people problem or a technology problem?

    IT can fix technology problems, managers need to fix people problems

    if someone gives an IT person a people problem and they try to fix it, it will probably not go very well

    same if you give a manager a technology problem and ask them to fix it

    this is the most important lesson that leaders needs to understand

  • Rose@slrpnk.net
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    1 month ago

    The bespoke software that runs most of the business world is actually way simpler than a lot of people think.

    If you’re a university student and some company hires you on the first year to work on a business analysis system to be used by a major regional retailer, you might be thinking you must be some kind of a wunderkid, but it also just might be because this system really isn’t that complicated, and you had no idea about the average salaries on this field, so they hired you on the cheap.

  • ILikeTraaaains@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Broken/buggy software usually is not developers/QA’s fault but management and clients.

    Consulting want something that conforms exactly what is signed and as fast as possible, if there are later bugs that doesn’t invalidates what was agreed or new features take longer to introduce it means more money as maintenance/evolution contracts.

    Clients often don’t see why they should pay extra and include extra time for better code. Also they prioritise stupid things like changing the font in a page over fixing a bug in the checkout page.

  • BertramDitore@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    The drinking water systems in the United States are so precarious and vulnerable, that I’m genuinely shocked we haven’t had more widespread issues with the water supply. The systems are made up of thousands of locally-managed interconnected intakes and outflows, and oversight is spotty and combative.

    Please use a water filter. And thank your local utilities and maintenance people for their hard work keeping us alive.

    • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      I saw a survey of small town watertowers in the US. There were a terrifying amount of dead birds in there, and living birds shitting.

      • pdxfed@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        And that was with the EPA in existence. Just wait until the rivers catch on fire again. Psychotic idiots.

  • defunct_punk@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I don’t work in a kitchen anymore but the amount of single-use plastic used in chain restaraunts is soul crushing. Most folks have no idea

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I’m in accounting and considering what I read in the news, it was surprising to me how honest it is in real, regular, non public companies. We get real audits that are trying to validate our records, we give them our real work to look at, try so hard to figure out the real cost and revenue each month and year, to allocate things correctly, nobody is pushing for some fake result, only for a clear picture.

    Those companies with fraud? A lot of things have to go wrong, and someone has to be really trying hard to defraud, and needs to convince others to go along with that. Most companies hire accounting because they actually want to have a good picture of what’s going on financially.

  • fakir@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    That business is just constant problem solving one after another and going through as many to-dos as you can day after day, while still maintaining sanity. That is persistence.

    That business is always a house of cards that can fall apart anytime and so you must always keep your eyes on it. That is exhausting worry.

    That business is so hard, you’ll be tempted to quit everyday. To overcome that urge to quit you’ll need a much bigger purpose or mission that drives you. Purpose brings determination.

    That business really is about value creation for the entire ecosystem (customers, employees, vendors) and that a business is not above that ecosystem. Wall St & American capitalism is short sighted because it demands you pass lesser and lesser value to that ecosystem quarter after quarter, and that is like a slow axe to your own foot.

    That most modern economic theory taught in business schools and used by execs in the biggest companies worldwide is all flawed because it fully relies on capturing and optimizing all sorts of business data, but the truth is that it is impossible to capture real world in data.