This is my current setup as well. While on the subject of Raspberry Pi 5, if you are using RPi5 with Raspbian as a Moonlight client and want to capture window manager shortcuts like `alt+tab` but unable to do so, Wayland is the problem. I'm trying to put this knowledge out their in the hopes of a search engine indexing it.
Funny to me that how #FF0000 is named Red, #0000FF is named Blue, but #00FF00 is Lime. Maybe it was supposed to be RLB. Although Green is the canonical name for that color range, what we actually refer as Green in daily life is close to #008000.
On hot summer days I set my LED lights to 100% green. The idea is that I get more perceptual brightness per unit of heat released into the house. On days like that I am still getting light through the window, even if it is filtered by a space blanket, and I am mainly looking at screens, so there is still plenty of red and blue light around.
You may want to measure the actual power usage and light output of your LED lights. Typically, green LEDs are less efficient than blue or red, which may cancel out the perceptual differences.
To reduce the heat that the bulbs are putting out, I think? Though, LED bulbs are already very efficient, and the difference in power usage between green light and a perceptibly the same brightness normal warm or sky tone light is probably minimal.
That doesn't sound SO absurd to me when I think about it. Limes do go through a fair range of colour space, after all. Maybe there should be a limeyellow?
My timeline has been full of cryptic messages from Twitter employees for the last hour. It doesn't look good. These people are some of the best engineers I've gotten to know.
Disclaimer; I work at Atlassian as a Software Engineer.
First of all, he has this weird take at the very beginning
> Interesting fact 1: Atlassian is the only company that has words "sh*" and "f*" in their core values.
Those values are "Don't f* the customer" and "Open company no bulls**" (oh the irony). This 'take' immediately threw me off. Why would you even mention something this trivial? I'll give it a pass as his emotions were probably elevated.
> After being in the company for more than a year I had found that folks with children are less likely to get a promotion. I had no evidence, it was a feeling.
Most of the folks I've seen got promoted had children. Having no evidence to support your claim in an article like this (with a banger title) is a red flag to me.
PTO is unfortunately something that I'm unfamiliar with. The country that I live in prohibits unlimited PTO by law, so I've never had that experience. Although, using the PTO that I acquire is still subject to approval of my manager. That part of the story is what the author should have really focused on. Going after the whole company in such a vicious manner is not a good look in my opinion.
I agree with most of the top comments here. Stay low, get a lawyer, deal with this silently. Hope his wife has a fast and easy recovery. Tough times, tough challenges for the author personally. No matter how hard I try, I certainly wouldn't be able to fully empathize with him.
I agree with you. Most of their stories usually span a year or two, meaning that they cannot be fabricated. The Dodo is way more legitimate than anything discussed in the article.
PaymoneyWubby made a video about this like 2 years ago https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_mvVQCl8fIg . Nothing has changed since then. People will keep buying into this until platforms intervene.
In the second recursion step, when entering the URL manually, the tab remains blank. If I instead try to click on the unedited "portfolio" link, the site opens in a new (native) tab.
Happens on Safari and Firefox (macOS) as well as Chromium (Debian).
I wasn't aware that my Samsung Smart TV had been logging almost my every action on the TV until I set up a PiHole server. Also, my respect for Apple grew by the fact that only device that wasn't doing loads of telemetry turned out to be my Macbook in the whole household.
Yes!! I was so grossed out by all the logs from my Smart TV. I'm embarrassed to say that I worked in ad tech (as an engineer) for years but I still didn't fully comprehend how pervasive that kind of tracking is in literally every environment.
> Also, my respect for Apple grew by the fact that only device that wasn't doing loads of telemetry turned out to be my Macbook in the whole household
Turns out that modern electronic devices are expensive. If you are not charged up-front, there's a good chance that you are being charged in some other way.
Apple devices still contact the mothership nonstop even with telemetry disabled, for a bunch of different reasons, even if you don’t use any iCloud or Apple services. Don’t be fooled by the DNS logs.