merikus

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago

I’m torn. I like the irony of the PAC-12 finally proving it can win it all, but a Michigan win gets us years and years of debate about whether their championship comes with an asterisk because of the sign stealing scandal.

 
 

This thread is for discussing anything about the slate of college football games from Thursday, November 23 through Saturday, November 25.

Post your general observations about the day's games or even use this as a Game Day Thread if the thread for the game you're following has no other participants.

I’m posting this thread early this week due to the CFB games on Thursday and Friday.

[–] [email protected] 21 points 1 year ago

This episode gave me such joy. I feel like Lower Decks leans a lot into the outrageous stories, like last week’s Evil Computer and Peanut Hamper thing. Those episodes are fun, but they lean pretty hard into that Rick and Morty humor.

This episode felt like a Star Trek episode. Mocking the over reliance on cave sets was a great premise, but from there we had a good episode showcasing several minor characters interacting with our main cast. It was a great way to allow them to branch out while sticking to the core relationship between the characters.

On top of that, the jokes were funny. I almost didn’t stop laughing at the subtle and not-so-subtle jabs at cave episodes throughout the years.

Personally, I’d like more episodes like this. It really showcases what is great about this show.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Thank you, oh LWAdmin, for cleaning up the Lemmyverse.

Consolidating communities is an important part of being able to create critical mass for them to work. Appreciate this move.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Oh wow, I didn’t realize how transparent and well run they really are, I was just basing that on vibes. Cool!

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 year ago (1 children)

About ten years ago a dear friend and I started a community radio station. In order to make our FCC license more competitive, we started internet streaming pretty early on.

We had great community buy-in, but we needed to broadcast 24/7 and decided to record and rebroadcast live shows.

We had no money, just a MacMini. So we had to do everything with things that came with MacOS or were free or near free.

We ended up creating a pretty impressive interlinking set of AppleScripts, Automator apps, and iTunes Smart Playlists, all driven by Calendar alarms. Calendar alarms would start recordings, which would use the magic import to iTunes folder to get it into iTunes. This would then move into a smart playlist that was set to look for certain tags and only have the most recent audio file with those tags in it.

When a rebroadcast would come up, it was pretty simple. A calendar alarm would trigger an AppleScript that triggered one of these Smart Playlists.

It all worked well for a long time. Ultimately we got our FCC license, and donations allowed us to improve our IT. But this station ran on iTunes, AudioHijack, AppleScript, Automator, and Calendar alarms for years.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Random question that people may not know the answer to, but is calckey.world run by the same people that run Lemmy.world? I’ve been pleased with this Lemmy instance and the people who are running it seem to know what they’re doing, and if so I’d just sign up with that one.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I am very happy with every ASUS router I have ever had. I’m particularly happy with my current XT8/ZenWifi AX. I have a large, older house that requires two access points, and I found the advanced settings on the ASUS (particularly after installing the Merlin firmware) made balancing device transfers between the two access points very smooth.

Whatever your use case may be, I think you’ll be happy with the ASUS.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

This looks like a great fit and $20 is very reasonable. Thanks!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

This looks like it could be a good option, thanks for the info.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

There is indeed a free iOS version and this seems like a great fit for what I need, thanks!

EDIT: Alas, it seems that, at least on iOS, you can’t do that without buying a $99 WiFiMan Wizard device.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

I’m happy to pay for something if it works. Like, not $100 but I’d pay $20 or so for a piece of software that meets this need.

 

I’m a pretty competent home networker who has volunteered to help a friend figure out some persistent networking problems. I think there may be an issue of signal loss due to the positioning of the router, and I want to be able to demonstrate that with data.

Does anyone know of a network surveying tool that would display, at a minimum, signal strength at various sample points? Ideally I’d like to be able to use this on iOS, but I can also use it on MacOS. I’m very comfortable with the command line if there are tools you would suggest using there.

Thanks!

 

Amtrak’s website is a godawful mess. It’s hard to search, hard to book, and hard to follow train updates.

Fortunately there’s a number of good tools out there:

https://juckins.net/amtrak_status/archive/html/resources.php - one of the most comprehensive websites for Amtrak data. The most valuable part of this website is the on-time performance data. You can look at historical on-time data for any train and get a sense of how late you’ll be (because, really, is Amtrak ever early?).

https://railrat.net - The answer to the perrienial problem that Wi-Fi sucks on trains and no one ever tells you how late you are. This is a train status website that is optimized for quick loading. It is stripped down to the most basic text elements so you can get the info you need even with one bar. There’s even a QR code link so you can share it with folks you meet on the train.

https://amtraker.com - a very nice map based train tracking tool. Lots of good visualization here about how late a train is running, and if you click a train number you can zoom in for more info.

https://railforless.us - An attempt—and a very good one at that—to try to make viewing a range of dates on Amtrak easier. The developer discussed the challenges and limitations in the About link on the page—basically Amtrak has very sophisticated bot detection software on its website, which, frankly, is shocking given how horrible their website is otherwise. Anyway, if you want to go somewhere on Amtrak and it doesn’t exactly matter when, this is a good site.

I’d love to hear about other tools people use with Amtrak!

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