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I love documentaries, and these are my favourites. All very worth a watch.

- The Crash Reel

- McConkey

- Buck

- Apollo 11

- Carts of Darkness

- The Wild and Wonderful Whites of West Virginia

- Samsara

- Baraka

- Brooklyn Castle

- Spellbound

- Drew: The Man Behind the Poster

- Crumb

- The Jinx

- The Art of Flight

- King of Kong

- Indie Game: The Movie

- Capturing the Friedmans

- OJ: Made in America

- The Barkley Marathons

- The Seven Five

- Murderball

- Unbranded

- Gringo: The Dangerous Life of John McAfee

- Big River Man

- Hoop Dreams

- Word Wars

- Free Solo

- Long Shot

- Meru

- Being Elmo

- All This Mayhem

- Jiro Dreams of Sushi

- The Cove

- Project Nim

- Alone in the Wilderness

- Behind the Curve

- The Dawn Wall

- Grizzly Man

- 13th

- Winnebago Man

- Man vs Snake: The Long and Twisted Tale of Nibbler

- Get Me Roger Stone

- Icarus

- 13th

- Koyaanisqatsi

- The Thin Blue Line

- An Inconvenient Truth

- Oklahoma City

- Virunga

- The Staircase

- Evil Genius

- Undefeated

- Betting on zero


Get me Roger Stone was brilliant, I never quite understood what a political provocateur was until I watched that. Now it’s amazing to spot them throughout the political universe.


Capturing the Friedmans is brilliantly constructed. Jarecki peels the onion one layer at a time, saving key details for when they'll have maximum impact.


Appreciate the list very much. Do you think you could share the ones to start with and why you liked them?


To be completely honest - my memory for films is terrible, so I struggle to remember why I loved many of these. Also, many of them take unexpected twists and to say why I loved them so much risks ruining part of the surprise. I've watched countless documentaries and in order for them to make this list I have to _really_ enjoy them, and for the most part they require no interest in the subject matter in my opinion - they're just objectively good. So, I'd recommend literally any to start with, but with all that being said, some favourites amongst the favourites:

The Crash Reel - an amazing tale of a person preparing for the olympics, with an unexpected turn and just a very heartwarming/impressive journey - very very highly recommended.

The Cove - follows a whaling event that happens every year, and exposes the savagery of it. However, it's filmed almost like a thriller, in how the team set up to expose the event. Very eye opening, if a little sad, but very very good.

Drew: The Man Behind the Poster - just an amazing documentary about a man who makes amazing film posters - incredible, you'll see that he's responsible for so many recognisable posters from your childhood.

Being Elmo - lovely film about the puppeteer behind Elmo - really heartwarming

13th - very good film about racial injustice in the legal system.


Thank you!


Absolutely not true. I had an iPhone 1, a 3GS and more recently a 13. After a while with the 13, I have switched back to Android (Pixel 6). Issues I had:

- Irritating keyboard behaviour (autocorrect, having to manually add custom words)

- Inability to organise the home screen to my liking

- Inability to adjust the volume of external devices, such as other Spotify devices

- Poor audio switching - if I have music playing, and play a video on another app, the music will not resume after the video ends

- Inability for third party apps to use the alarm volume - so that if I install a third party alarm app, it will change my system media volume to the level of the alarm. Therefore, if I'm playing music and my alarm rings, suddenly the music volume will increase.

- Inability to change the snooze time (hence having to resort to a third party alarm app)

These are just a small selection of (seemingly minor) issues that I had with iOS, and there were more. I appreciate Apple as a brand for its more favourable data privacy aspects, but iOS has a lot of shortcomings and reasons for a user to prefer Android. However, it's important to note that I'm used to Motorola G phones, and now the Pixel, both of which forego any irritating skinning/custom UI over the top of plain Android.


I really wish more of these PaaS solutions would offer UK regions - it's a big issue for us compliance-wise and means we can't use a lot of them. Render.com seems to be one solution - and we're currently using Cloud66 with our own AWS instances as a solution, although I would prefer something lower-effort, like Heroku has historically been.


I understand the negative reaction, but I'm not sure I agree with the following:

>Dear original post author, you really need to start doing something that you enjoy or that motivates you. You can also try to structure your life in a way that allows you to not work when you don't feel like you can or will be efficient.

May I ask why? The OP doesn't suggest anywhere they are unhappy. Presumably, they have a very good work-life balance, seemingly leaning toward the 'life' side of the equation. They presumably have a lot of time to themselves, to enjoy as they see fit. Furthermore, they say that their performance reviews range from good, to great. So if all the above is true, both parties seem to be happy with the arrangement.

I am in a similar position, and I think it boils down to not relying on my work for personal satisfaction or happiness. I work to live, not live to work. I provide a good service to my employer, and I believe my value is in my overall output, not overall input. When I am needed, I work hard enough to achieve the end goal. Otherwise, I work enough to satisfy my employer, regardless of how long that takes. My relationship with my employer is transactional, and I see no moral obligation to work beyond what is absolutely necessary - providing I do enough to satisfy my employer.

I do however understand the mindset of someone who is motivated and driven by work and their career. If that's what floats your boat, more power to you. That's not everyone though, and as long as the person is still providing enough value to someone that their salary is still a worthwhile investment - hey ho!


No idea, but I wonder if squatting on the most popular misspelt domains, to serve malware/whatever?

e.g. facebool.com or similar, presumably there's an interesting distribution of similar misspellings.


The DJI system is the state of the art consumer unit basically. With the caddx unit it's especially small (to fit on smaller quads):

https://www.quadcopters.co.uk/dji-hd-digital-fpv/iflight-suc...

The silver box and the camera are the relevant parts, the connection to the other PCB is just to receive telemetry from the flight controller.

Edit: better link to the actual unit itself:

https://www.buildyourowndrone.co.uk/caddx-fpv-air-unit-micro...


Even the latest Tesla only reaches ~1.5G - not even that. G-LOC won't happen until 5 or 6, so I think we're a way off yet!


That's for young, fit, etc people. Some quick googling says a particularly susceptible person might very well pass out at as low as 3 Gs. Still way below what a Tesla can pull, though.


Considering how faint some passengers have looked with my boy-racing in the past, I suspect the G limit for some people is much much lower :).


It wouldn't necessarily need to be g-forces, given how many Americans have severe underlying health issues, you might just go over a rough bump and have a stroke or something.

Roller coasters tend to hit a good amount of gs, but if you pass out you'll be fine since you're not driving. One wonders if a Tesla detects its pilot unconscious can it bring itself to a full emergency stop. Automatically contact emts and then automatically distribute snacks to the arriving EMTs


Any examples? I love the show but never followed Simon, and now I'm curious.


Well, this is pretty good I think https://twitter.com/AoDespair/status/1345365357939355650

He definitely does not pull his punches.


yeah, this is a low tweet. He is smart enough to know it is ugly sexism, yet continues to defend it.


I disagree with this, but I know where you're coming from.

I don't think it's slow necessarily, but it's very disorientating (especially at first). Because of this, the whole first season can fail to make any sense, and so feel slow. You miss out on a lot of the value that the characters bring because you don't know WTF is going on.

I tried 2 or 3 times at least to get into it, always failing a few episodes into series one. It took a further watch with the mindset of "I'm going to watch regardless, and trust the recommendations that brought me to it". By the end of the first series, I understood the slang/characters/plot well enough to be rewarding by the rich characters and relationships and loved it. From there all the way to the end of the final series it was plain sailing.

I don't think there's many other series that I've had that experience with, and I really wholeheartedly recommend struggling through the first series (and with subtitles is a great idea), as the whole thing is my favourite TV show of all time.

I think you're right that it doesn't have any big explosive events necessarily, but the story is so great that I don't think it needs the artificial cliffhanger-ness that other 'faster' series may have.


I have also made the switch. I do notice a few irritations that I struggle to remember off the top of my head, but a big one recently with the Android app is the lack of support for password managers (at least LastPass)


1Password works very well with FF, for what it's worth.


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