WhatTheDuck

joined 8 months ago
[–] WhatTheDuck@piefed.social 5 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

If it's specifically your jawline that troubles you, have you considered starting by wearing a mask? They're not as common as COVID days, but it's normalized enough. It could be a good way to test the waters and build up more confidence.

I'm not the person you asked, and I can't personally relate. Apologies if what I said is unwelcomed.

[–] WhatTheDuck@piefed.social 11 points 3 months ago

I highly doubt Reddit is actually gaining that many new users, but the number of accounts created? Sure.

Reddit never has enough bots for their AI slop machine. They create more bot accounts to "boost engagement" via posts and comments.

[–] WhatTheDuck@piefed.social 2 points 4 months ago

Thanks, I do, but I have other non-technical family members. They request media via Jellyseer, which then sends the request to Sonarr.

Most of the time it's fine, but when the show has 8 seasons? It'll download each episode individually - some of which won't be available/poor quality/no subtitles. There's often a season pack with all 8 seasons in it and are more reliable subtitles/quality wise.

It's an infrequent but annoying quirk I have to manually intervene with.

[–] WhatTheDuck@piefed.social 2 points 4 months ago (2 children)

Any initial thoughts so far (if you've had the time to look into them)? I really want to find something that can support multi-season downloads. The *arr stacks have rejected the feature in the past and it's been my biggest gripe lately.

The alternatives seem pretty young still. I wonder if anyone's done a feature comparison between them...

[–] WhatTheDuck@piefed.social 4 points 4 months ago (2 children)

Eh... depends on the interpretation of overuse. One person's excess is another person's minimal. Different subjects - like ones that require researching - are expected to need more tabs open. It loosely parallels having multiple books splayed open for quick referencing.

Though, I do feel the number of tabs lately has drastically increased for myself and colleges.

[–] WhatTheDuck@piefed.social 7 points 4 months ago (4 children)

The decline of good search engines and the AI slopocalypse has made it difficult to find good resources. Let alone, to find it a second time. So a lot of us close the tab only after the related task is completed. Bookmarks are too permanent for one-off tasks (plus, we probably have way too many bookmarks already).

[–] WhatTheDuck@piefed.social 3 points 4 months ago (1 children)

It's crazy to hear you've been booted for being inactive! It's not like Discord has a limit on usercount (...do they?). I've know people who disappeared for a year+ only to return like normal. Life happens and it's best to leave the door open for anyone to return someday.

I also don't use other social media outside the fediverse. Public discords have always been a gamble. Mods can only do so much to filter out children/assholes. Private discords tend end up in a death spiral of inactivity in my experience. This one sounds like there's a ton of people, so hopefully it continues to thrive!

[–] WhatTheDuck@piefed.social 3 points 4 months ago (3 children)

That's all great to hear, thanks for the details! It's hard meeting new people these days, so it's great this type of post was allowed by the admins.

[–] WhatTheDuck@piefed.social 4 points 4 months ago (5 children)

Thanks for sharing! Definitely nice to find mature corners of the internet. I'm excited to check it out later!

Do you have a rough idea about the demographics? Most places I find are still 90% men. Not saying anything is inherity wrong with that, but the vibes are different. It's easy to feel "other'd" if you're not "one of the bros." I wish more places had an even split with women/nonbinary folks.

[–] WhatTheDuck@piefed.social 23 points 5 months ago

I love this. We need a picture from the front to fully appreciate the spectacle.

[–] WhatTheDuck@piefed.social 1 points 6 months ago (2 children)

Thank you for the time you've spent in your reply; it's very well put and thought out.

Ask him to do tasks where the output can be safely thrown away or delayed indefinitely while he tries again.

This is a great point. He's been given "easy" tasks with - what should be - plenty of time to finish for an upcoming release. Then we feel the pain when it's inevitably not done in time and/or being rushed to a finish. Maybe a task that's harder with no deadline would be less stressful for everyone.

Is there something Bob should read right now to keep him busy and to give him some chance of producing better output in the near future?

It's hard to know what will help him since his struggles seem to be more generic "coding principals" vs something like "understanding Python better." For example, he'll do weird things like use a float instead of an int or an Enum of true/false rather than a boolean. They're small things that make you go "But..why???" ...which are challenges of their own to explain without coming off demeaning.

I've given him references for Design Patterns, The Typescript Handbook, and related API references when he starts a task. Do you have any recommendations that might help him?

...if someone tries to blame you for Bob’s production...

Thankfully management is very reasonable, and the rest of the team are more aware now. We're working on sharing the responsibility more.

[–] WhatTheDuck@piefed.social 1 points 6 months ago

Most cases we don't. Computed signals are better, but those can't be used for non-injectable contexts (like class models).

 

Apologies for being nonspecific, but I don't know how else to describe Bob's struggles. Bob has been on the team for over a year now, and his code is just... not okay.

To his credit, he can make something that works... but that's not enough. His code belongs on programming horror. He's not supposed to be my junior; I'm just the repository's lead. I spend half my week helping him. Reviewing his pull requests takes hours because it's always a rats nest that needs significant refactoring/simplification. I'd love to say "do better" - but this is his best.

Most recently, Bob crashed his dev environment with a getter. (A mix of nested parsing logic with Angular's change detection = CPU crashed). It'd be impressive if it wasn't so irritating since I've already had a conversation with him about proper use of getters/setters. I even demonstrated how spammy the calls can be with a console.log statement for emphasis.

I could go on, but this is enough of a rant. I don't really know how to handle him going forward; I spend so much time helping and teaching him but he retains none of it.

Is there any hope for him? Any learning material? Advice on balancing my own sanity and workload?

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submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by WhatTheDuck@piefed.social to c/cat@lemmy.world
 

And yes, he does purr with his mouth open.

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