Ep. 317 Ramtha's School of Enlightenment - A Daughter's Story Part 1 Episode 144 Remastered
In this remastered episode I chat at length with Alexandra who grew close to a family friend before deciding to follow him out of state and into the clasp of aSpreaker
Katy just got an ad for a "grounding sheet"... It's literally a blanket that plugs into a wall outlet so that you can be grounded while you sleep.
In case you're probe to static buildup in your sleep, I guess? How is this a thing?
So, I learned about Hamming codes a while back. They're pretty neat, but a lot of modern technology uses Reed-Solomon instead. I've wanted to learn about that one, but it involves some pretty heavy math that often goes over my head.
I've found a few different videos on YouTube that try to explain it "simply" but they all tend to gloss certain details over. After watching a few of them, I've noticed that the parts they gloss over are different from each other, and I'm wondering if I can just hunt down enough of them that I can piece the rest together myself.
All things considered, this seems a weirdly fitting way to learn it.
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Logged into my online banking to be greeted by a notification about an "unusual transaction". It was today's vet visit.
Yes. It was unusual. It was also entirely legit, but thanks.
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As a side note: I sent my parents a text asking if we could borrow $X to hold us over until next pay day. My mother replied by saying that she'd "accidentally" sent $(X + Y) and to spend the extra as we see fit. We have a tiny bit of breathing room again.
She is amazing, and I am so fortunate to have family who are able to help out in an emergency. It's not lost on me that many don't.
Benny (our cat) was under the weather yesterday so we took him to the vet. We went home with some meds and general optimism. He seemed to perk up later in the day.
This morning he's super lethargic and uninterested in his food. Which is super not like him. Have another appointment with the vet in an hour and a half.
Not only am I stressed out about the cat, but I'm also stressed about the added financial burden of two unexpected vet visits (and I feel like an asshole about the latter).
We'll figure it out, but if the universe could cut us some slack for like five minutes, that'd be great.
Edit: typo
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I've run into a snag with an sqlite database I've been working on. Below is a simplified example of the problem.
Suppose I have the following table:
CREATE TABLE "prices" (
"id" INTEGER NOT NULL UNIQUE,
"name" TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE,
"list_price" NUMERIC NOT NULL,
"sale_price" NUMERIC,
"tax_rate" NUMERIC NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY("id" AUTOINCREMENT)
);
Is there a way to do something like the following?
SELECT
name,
CASE
WHEN sale_price IS NULL
THEN list_price
ELSE sale_price
END AS price,
price * tax_rate AS tax
FROM prices;
The
tax
column doesn't seem to acknowledge the price
column's existence, presumably because it's a column in the query rather than the source table. I could re-implement the CASE
logic for the tax
field, but that feels inelegant and error-prone.Is there a better way to do this?
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WITH
to do it in two steps:WITH pre_price AS (
SELECT
name,
CASE WHEN sale_price IS NULL
THEN list_price
ELSE sale_price END
AS price,
tax_rate FROM prices
)
SELECT
name,
price,
price * tax_rate AS tax
FROM pre_price;
A text I just sent to my mother (presented with no context):
It's sometimes tricky that my wife and mother have very similar looking names and are alphabetically right next to eachother in my contacts. It's astonishing that that hasn't led to more embarrassing mistakes.
Katy and I like to watch psychological thrillers from time to time, but I've noticed a recurring trope that confuses me. It goes like this: Psychopath lives in an outwardly normal looking house, but has a secret passage to a secret murder basement.
Who built this? Am I to believe he excavated the earth, poured the concrete, ran the (usually admittedly shoddy) electrical himself? Did no contractor at any point ever think to themselves: "this doesn't seem right. Perhaps I should alert the authorities?"
Edit: typo
Edit: I'm an idiot who confused diameter with circumference for some reason. Embarrassing original post follows.
Was playing around a bit with the OpenWeatherMap API. I wanted to know how precise I needed to be with the latitude & longitude values, so I decided to do some quick calculations.
To get a rough idea, I wanted to determine how much a change of one degree of latitude would move in kilometers. I knew the diameter of the earth was something fairly close to 40,000 km but wanted to verify that factoid. I did a quick duckduckgo search, and the top three results (on seemingly separate web sites) all said 12,756 km. In fact one of them hilariously said 12.756 km.
I assume this is the result of LLMs filling the internet with crap, but it's alarming that if I didn't know any better, I'd have just blindly accepted this as fact.
12.756 km may be a locale difference; if the site wasn't US or UK-based the decimal might be the thousands separator.
the diameter of the earth was something fairly close to 40,000 km
s/diameter/circumference/
?
Fine, I'll watch #wwdc24 to see what everyone's been talking about.
Before a few hours ago, I didn't even realize it was happening.
Okay, I'm just going to say it because amazingly enough, some people don't seem to get this.
Just because I'm critical of Israel bombing hospitals in Palestine doesn't mean I'm pro-Hamas. I'm not.
It frustrates me that this is a thing that even needs to be said.
Edit: typo
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Ep. 316 Ramtha's School of Enlightenment - A Father's Perspective. Episode 143 Part 2 Remastered
In this 2-part series, I first chat with Bob about his experiences losing his daughter to JZ Knight's Ramtha's School of Enlightenment. Bob speaks about the heaSpreaker
Decided to learn and use #LibreOffice Base for a thing because I thought it would be an easier way to slap a quick and dirty UI on a database than rolling an app from scratch (which I already knew how to do).
I was wrong, but at this point I'm going full sunk cost fallacy.
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Ep. 316 Ramtha's School of Enlightenment - A Father's Perspective. Episode 143 Part 1 Remastered
In this 2-part series, I first chat with Bob about his experiences losing his daughter to JZ Knight's Ramtha's School of Enlightenment. Bob speaks about the heaSpreaker
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Ep. 315 Manhattan Cult Story - Episode 141 Remastered Part 2
In this episode I speak with Spencer about his time spent in Sharon Gan's cult in Manhattan known as the Odyssey Study Group. Spencer descirbes all of this in hSpreaker
Ep. 315 Manhattan Cult Story - Episode 141 Remastered Part 1
In this episode I speak with Spencer about his time spent in Sharon Gan's cult in Manhattan known as the Odyssey Study Group. Spencer descirbes all of this in hSpreaker
Okay, sqlitebrowser (from the #Debian repositories) is actually a pretty decent tool. It provides a nice point-and-click interface that makes working with #sqlite3 databases a little bit nicer. Knowledge of how to write an #SQL query is still a requirement, but it makes creating/editing tables more convenient. Maybe it's well known, but I just discovered it yesterday.
Edit: sqlite browser, not mysqlbrowser
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screwlisp
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Philipp :emacs: :nixos:
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Jonathan Lamothe
in reply to Philipp :emacs: :nixos: • •@Philipp :emacs: :nixos:
Hasn't been fully decided yet. I'm presently working with an SQLite database, though it's already migrated from LibreOffice Base (don't ask).
I'm trying to build a nice front-end on it so my wife can use it without having to learn SQL. I've worked with
persistent-sqlite
before because ofyesod
, but setting it up as a standalone thing is a pain, and it really irks me that I need a whole separate library (esqueleto
) just to do joins. I mean, isn't that the whole point of SQL in the first place?Side note: I kept responding to the wrong post.
Boyd Stephen Smith Jr.
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •I hear talking to PostgreSQL can be enjoyable.
But, I fear there will always be issues with partiality and overlaps when modeling sum (or Pi!) types in SQL.
$dayjob is still just composing and running untyped, unstructured "SQL", but we are also still talking to MS SQL which is well-known to be unfriendly even compared to other SQL DBs.
Jonathan Lamothe
in reply to Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. • •HΓ©cate Kleidukos
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •@hackage/hpqtypes-extras
Flora