NAK

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 16 points 9 months ago

The best thing you can do is treat her respectfully. Say hello when you pass and be courteous when you talk, but putting up the professional barrier to any kind of personal relationship likely is your best strategy.

Your coworkers also see these traits. They will see you treating this person with respect, but also not participating in her drama. That's the mentality you should have to forming a winning workplace presence. People will see you treat her kindly, but also do not participate in the drama.

Everyone respects that person

[–] [email protected] 14 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Cold doesn't damage the battery. Batteries are basically electricity pumps. When they're cold they're less willing to give up their electrons. But being cold isn't inherently good or bad. It essentially reduces the efficiency of the pump.

Generally speaking the thing you want to avoid with ev batteries is getting them too hot. Heat damages them more than anything else.

The next temperature related thing is putting a heavy load on the battery when it's too cold. The important thing with this is a cold battery itself isn't necessarily bad, it's putting a heavy load on a cold battery that's bad

Also generally speaking, the healthiest state to store a battery is half charged.

If you'd like to read up on it the thing to search for is "lithium plating."

So long story short, if you're going to leave your EV for weeks at a time, the best thing you could do is leave it plugged in to a wall outlet and set the charge limit to 50%. Remember, EV batteries don't lose electricity when they're cold, they just can't pump all the electrons in them because they're cold. If you leave it plugged in and set the charger limit to 50% it'll maintain the battery at a good state of charge. It won't draw that much electricity either.

[–] [email protected] 22 points 10 months ago

People are also missing that this extra bandwidth will help with mesh systems.

Not everyone is savvy enough, or has the ability to run Ethernet to every access point. The additional bandwidth here will help people who need better Wi-Fi, but are only going to buy an easy off the shelf solution

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago

By definition a disaster recovery solution needs to be geographically separate. You're protecting yourself from catastrophe, and some of those scenarios include your main location burning down, flooding, being hit by a tornado, etc etc.

So you either need to collocate systems with a friend who you trust, purchase colocation services from a provider, or use a cloud service to achieve what you're looking for to truly have a DR solution.

As far as how to do that, the main idea is to have that point in time available on a system that, even if you get compromised, the backups won't. The old school method here is to use an external hard drive or a tape device, and physically store that offsite. So like use your regular backup mechanism, and in addition to what it's doing now schedule a daily/weekly/monthly job that backs up to this other device, and then store that away from your main location.

That's essentially the idea though, and there are any number of solutions you can use to do it.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 10 months ago (2 children)

What cloud backup solution are you using? A lot of them offer additional protection that would keep a history of your files. You can essentially say "once a week create a point in time recovery of all my files" and then you could recover your files from that point in time.

This usually costs extra, and it makes sense why. They're essentially keeping extra copies of your data for you.

How that is configured allows you to determine your RPO, or recovery point objective.

https://www.imperva.com/learn/availability/recovery-point-objective-rpo/

So you can decide how much data you're comfortable losing by determining how often those point in time recovery events happen.

Did that make sense?

[–] [email protected] 41 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (6 children)

The real issue here is backups vs disaster recovery.

Backups can live on the same network. Backups are there for the day to day things that can go wrong. A server disk is corrupted, a user accidentally deletes a file, those kinds of things.

Disaster recovery is what happens when your primary platform is unavailable.

Your cloud provider getting taken down is a disaster recovery situation. The entire thing is unavailable. At this point you're accepting data loss and starting to spin up in your disaster recovery location.

The fact they were hit by crypto is irrelevant. It could have been an earthquake, flooding, terrorist attack, or anything, but your primary data center was destroyed.

Backups are not meant for that scenario. What you're looking for is disaster recovery.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 10 months ago (3 children)

Is there another app on your phone that can manage your calendar?

If desktop is ok the changes aren't syncing back to Google, so it's got to be something on your phone.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago

You're right. I'm sorry

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Because that's a thing capitalism is great at? If the connection between capitalism and ruthless efficiency and iteration isn't apparent to whoever is reading this then it's really not worth the conversation

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago (4 children)

When the response to my question of "what do you think is better" is an esoteric shout out to a culture that's been dead for thousands of years, that isn't even in the first page of Google results for "six nations" yeah. You're right. It's not a good faith argument

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago (6 children)

Ok. Let's switch to six nations.

That definitely answers my question

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