wizzor, (edited )

Lithium batteries are happiest between 20 and 80% state of charge. You should not store them outside of that range. Charging a little often also doesn’t hurt your battery like many seem to believe.

Charging while cold is bad, but storing in cold is good.

Also, NiMh and NiCd batteries are different tha Lithium based ones. Check what type of battery you have. Phones and EVs are almost always lithium though.

RalphWolf,

To be clear, a car that uses either gasoline or diesel will have a lead acid battery and not a lithium battery. Electric cars have lithium. Just to clear up any confusion.

wizzor,

Yes, correct! I will update my post to reflect this. Working with EVs can give me EV blinders.

echodot,

Quite a lot of electric cars will still have a lead acid battery for the low charge things like wipers, electric windows and electric mirrors. It’s simpler to do that than to have a complicated system to step down the voltage to something they can accept from a lithium ion battery.

So essentially electric cars have two independent electrical systems that have nothing to do with each other. Interestingly this means that you can use an electric car to jump start an ICE car, even though a lot of people claim you cannot.

That said some electric cars do go the route of a step down transformer so check your car.

ManosTheHandsOfFate,
@ManosTheHandsOfFate@lemmy.world avatar

Dang it! And I just rigged my alternator to stop charging my car battery at 80%.

0_0j,
@0_0j@lemmy.world avatar

70% is the Sweet spot…

As a camper, i set the dc to dc to stop charging at that, let the solar fill the rest sloowwly as im at the desired destination.

Been happier with the battery health since

UnderwaterSwift,

deleted_by_author

  • Loading...
  • DogMuffins,

    It’s a setting in Android phones I think.

    You can set them to only charge to 80%.

    el_abuelo,

    85% but yeah. You can also set them to slow charge. So my phone, when set to Night routine, will change these settings to 85% slow charge while I sleep. I’ve yet to need to top-up that charge but if I did, I just leave it plugged in while I get ready for the day (with night mode off)

    Shady_Shiroe,
    @Shady_Shiroe@lemmy.world avatar

    Since we live in the digital age, I think it would be awesome if everyone knew a little bit of python and how you can automate boring tasks using it. Well doesn’t have to only be python but it would be cool if something like it was added to school systems

    pineapplelover,

    I know a little python but have no idea how I would use it to automate anything useful. Any suggestions? What do you do with it?

    Cloudygrey,

    Look up Automate boring stuff with python

    Not being sarcastic

    I_Has_A_Hat,

    How much of the “boring stuff” is applicable to what most people do in every day life, rather than just what people with jobs in IT or CS would encounter?

    captain_aggravated,
    @captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

    I use Bash rather than Python for this, but I have scripts for doing things like converting a .docx to a .pdf file. Sure you can open MS Word, wait for it to load, navigate the menus, maybe have to know that some software still handles this via the Print dialog for some reason, that you “print to PDF,”…or write a little script that does the job, put it in a certain folder along with a little ~6 line config file, and now you can right click a file and click “convert to PDF” and it just does it without opening any apps.

    I have occasional need to do things to image files, like rotate a batch of them, or convert them to gray scale. Once again I have bash scripts that call imagemagick for this, but it can be done in Python using the Python Image Library (PIL).

    I use a Python-based autokeyer, I have a bunch of abbreviations or whatnot that I can type, like (asterisk)wtl becomes Welcome to the Linux community! because I used to type that so often when I was active in r/linuxmasterrace. That one is just a simple find-and-replace that takes no coding, but I have some that insert the correct date, that look up information from files on the fly and insert it…if you write business emails, you really should have an autokeyer.

    bugsmith,

    Good question. I am now a software developer, but in a previous career I was a logistics manager. In that job I had a lot of repetitive report downloading and creating. It would take hours each day. I used techniques taught in that book to automate downloading reports directly, as well as generating some in SAP by automating mouse and keyboard movements, as well as generating CSVs and Excel spreadsheets. In all cases I either cut the time required or at least the time I had to be physically present. Many jobs could have similar applications of a little Python, I imagine. Certainly not all jobs though, of course.

    captain_aggravated,
    @captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

    To expand on this, it’s a book/ebook with that title “Automate The Boring Stuff With Python.”

    Cloudygrey,

    Also a course on udemy now, iirc

    Shady_Shiroe,
    @Shady_Shiroe@lemmy.world avatar

    I made a script to go through a folder and move them to new folders if image is in portrait or landscape mode

    tiredofsametab,

    Back in my day, we used shell scripts and Perl AND WE LIKED IT!

    Seriously though, learning anything to automate the boring bits can be good. Just test well before relying on anything.

    impiri,

    If someone tells you no or you try and fail at something, life actually just continues on from that point, and you can try other things

    Spendrill,

    In my very early life if I tried things and failed my parents would then try to help by offering harsh criticism and then a very tedious and didactic lecture. Made me unwilling to try to do anything.

    In later life I belatedly learned that being really good at anything usually involves being really bad at it for a long time. Also, there will come a point where you don’t suck at something and you will mistakenly think you have become quite good at it. You can still take pleasure from not sucking but be careful of overestimating your abilities.

    tl;dr - It’s ok to be bad at things, you have to be bad at things before you become good.

    Yerbouti, (edited )

    Jazz was the most popular music during the 1st half of the XX century. It basically was what hip-hop is today, or rock was to the second half of the XX century.

    sirico,
    @sirico@feddit.uk avatar

    If you’re unsure which side of a path to be on especially with shared paths default to the national driving side. Bonus if you hear a bike bell don’t jump to a side or call your dog into their path just keep doing what your doing

    Kelsenellenelvial,

    The bike thing is real. So often I hit my bell or call out “on your left” when about to pass people from behind. About 50% of the time those people immediately move to the left, which is why I always try to indicate far enough in advance for them to get in my way, realize their mistake and move back before I catch up to them .

    grepe,

    The only people that keep doing what they were doing when I call behind them on my bike are the ones that are walking in a group side by side blocking the entire width of the pathway…

    sadcoconut,

    I’d suggest not calling anything out. People may well not hear exactly what you said and, even if they do, are unlikely to be able to process the information quickly enough. They’ll end up guessing what to do and that will often result in them doing the ‘wrong’ thing.

    fruitSnackSupreme,

    I never call out or ring my bell, and it works great every time. Except then people get pissed for some reason that I didn’t ring my bell? No idea why they care, I’m not going to hit them.

    tiredofsametab,

    If you're in a country where most people don't drive, don't expect this to work well. Japan seemingly has no system (though people in most of the country will probably move left most of the time). It definitely takes some adjusting to the chaos of everyone walking wherever the hell they want.

    Sector9,
    @Sector9@mastodon.social avatar

    @Lianrepl
    You're not required,
    -to have children
    -get married
    -buy a house

    you are allowed to make your own decisions and not be pressured by your family, friends or society.
    It's okay.
    You're not a monster because you make a choice that suits your life better.
    And... you are allowed to change your mind on what's best for you at any time, it's your life.

    dullbananas,
    @dullbananas@lemmy.ca avatar
    turbonewbe,

    Unless you are wealthy, if you think life is to expensive you should ask for more taxes, not less.

    The issue is not your net income, but wealth redistribution and solidarity.

    aesopjah,

    Except for the part where they just make more tanks instead of give people insulin or whatever

    deadbeef79000,

    If you can, move to a first world country.

    If not: revolution.

    freewheel,

    The United States is a first world country, and the parent comment applies here as well.

    deadbeef79000,

    That was the not-so-subtle dig at the bullshit the people of the USA put up with.

    Only the rich get the benefit of the country’s wealth and power.

    freagle,

    Taxes are completely fucked. Here’s why.

    ALL of the wealth of a society is produced by workers - they do the mining, the harvesting, the planting, the refining, the quality assurance, the distribution, literally ALL value is produced by the workers.

    The owners got togther and formed a country. Not the workers, not “the people”, only owners formed and organized the country. They chose a private property regime because they now own all the wealth produced by workers. 100% of what workers produce under an employment regime is owned by the owners.

    But the owners can’t sell anything if the workers can’t buy it. And the workers can’t work unless they can support their needs. So the owners take a portion of that value they steal and give it to the workers.

    Then, the government that the owners created take money from the workers in the form of income tax, sales tax, and property tax.

    Then they create NGOs and spend billions of dollars (that they stole from workers, remember) to convince workers to DONATE their salaries to the NGOs to solve social ills created by the owners.

    Then the owners use the government to maintain their own wealth structures and prevent the workers from threatening them. When the owners make mistakes that would cost them fortunes, they take the money from the workers taxes.

    Then they realized that even with this scheme workers were able to buy and own things. So they used their government to change the rules again. Fractional reserve banking let’s a bank hold 100 dollars in cash and create 900 in loans. The bank loans this magical money to workers and the workers collateralize it by giving the bank on lien on their house. The bank now has a more collateral that they can use to generate 9x loan values from, and the act of generating that money causes price inflation in housing, which increases the amount of money the banks can loan out. The net result is that workers pay rent to live in their own homes and that rent goes to the owners who control the government. When this scheme runs into issues, the owners use money taken from the workers (a portion of what was given to them after everything was stolen from them) to smooth out any hiccups and keep the scam rolling.

    So, no, taxes don’t make things better. Only completely dismantling capitalism and running the government for workers by workers and eliminating private property and profit will ever help the 99%. Everything else is a scam and a distraction.

    deathbird,

    Taxes can be a tool for taking unjustly gained capital and redistributing it to the people as a whole.

    That does require workers exerting power through and over the state, but taxes are simply an exercise of power towards redistribution of resources.

    freagle,

    Not really though. The workers don’t control the state, the owners do. The workers can’t actually use the state to advance their interests. Every concession given to them by the owners is a) only given if the alternative is revolution and b) rolled back as soon as possible. Once the workers take over the state, taxes no longer serve that purpose but instead serve the purpose of smoothing out the money supply to avoid hoarding and accumulation.

    Yes, in theory it would be great if we could tax the rich, but history shows us that we cannot, and ultimately theory has shown us the same thing.

    shinigamiookamiryuu,

    That GoodWill and Autism Speaks are not valid as charities/nonprofits.

    sadcoconut,

    Could you provide a explanation for someone not in the US?

    shinigamiookamiryuu,

    GoodWill is a chain thrift store that uses legal loopholes to achieve charity status. A lot of charities are like this in America as well as elsewhere (should stress it’s not just an “American thing”). Sometimes the legal definition of a charity isn’t well-thought-out enough which allows for too much wiggle room when it comes to what a charity is. GoodWill achieved charity status by presenting itself to exclusively offer positions to people with disabilities in a society that does not favor them for job positions, but at the same time GoodWill underpays them and inserts them into working conditions comparable to the beginning of the industrial revolution when children would be injured or killed by the machines they were supposed to be working on.

    Autism Speaks, another famous so-called charity, has a similar story. They came into prominence for saying they will help “treat autism” and help those in need, and they are partners with Sesame Street, with whom they are co-sponsors. However, people often ignore their attitude is one of eugenics. They believe the people they present themselves as helping are burdens and will side with anyone who has acted on this, including Planned Parenthood and even the Canadian government pre-2020, the former of whom is preferential with abortions (therefore amounting to eugenics, in fact that was why they were eventually cancelled) and the latter of whom did not let anyone with a disability immigrate into the country for forty years.

    zemja,

    Cement is highly alkaline. If wet cement comes in contact with your skin, it can cause third degree chemical burns. So don’t write your name in wet cement like Bart Simpson.

    LuckyBoy,

    Yeah, use a stick, not your fingers.

    DogMuffins,

    IDK if “third degree” chemical burns are a thing.

    Cement will dissolve the fat from under your skin, and a third degree burn is when you cook the fat under your skin.

    Also it’s not going to burn you within a few minutes the way we normally think of a chemical burn.

    freewheel,

    The “degree” is based on the amount of damage done to flesh, bone, and skin. Each type of burn has different criteria, so yes, a third degree chemical burn will be different from a third degree flame burn, which will in turn be different than a third degree steam burn.

    DogMuffins,

    Bullshit.

    freewheel,

    If you have a coherent rebuttal, I’m happy to listen. If not, Johns Hopkins has a good page on the subject.

    DogMuffins,

    I had a quick look at this which basically says that you’re right and I’m wrong.

    Additionally, it lists sunburn as an example of a radiation burn, which is kinda neat.

    freewheel,

    How about this - your position is that a chemical burn from concrete cannot reach third degree? That it doesn’t happen fast enough to cause that damage?

    Let me use your vernacular.

    Bullshit. (Warning: NSFW)

    DogMuffins,

    That’s not what I said at all.

    Nia,

    One for people in the US:

    You aren’t taxed at the higher rate for all of your income when you get a raise that puts you in a higher tax bracket, only the part that is in the range of that bracket specifically. The rest of your income below the bracket is taxed the same as before.

    I’ve seen a lot of people decline promotions and raises over this, and bosses are very happy to let you continue thinking that’s how it works.

    Not sure if that counts as not common knowledge, but a lot of people I know didn’t know it before.

    Kelsenellenelvial,

    While that’s true for taxes alone, there are income gaps where a small increase of income can result in a loss of various benefits that were worth more than the increase. This can be things like food stamps, subsidized rent/childcare, etc… People end up stuck because while they could potentially earn significant advancement and increased wages over a 4-7 year period, they’d have to weather a significant deficit through intervening years.

    Ideally there should be no cliffs, and all these social programs should have a sliding scale of benefits so a person can always benefit from increased income. Part of the problem is they’re managed across multiple levels of government that don’t always play well together, and a sliding scale might mean more benefits paid out to people that don’t currently qualify. That’s probably actually a good thing, but gets spun politically as undesirable.

    neilgall,
    @neilgall@mastodon.scot avatar

    @Lianrepl Butter is good for you and margarine is not.

    Swedneck,
    @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    Cars are way more expensive than you think, and getting rid of it will make you happier and way wealthier.

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=ztHZj6QNlkM

    venoft,
    @venoft@lemmy.world avatar

    I don’t think it will make me happier to spend 1.5 hour in the bus and train instead of 20min by car.

    Swedneck,
    @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

    unless you live in like, the netherlands maybe, the traffic is going to make driving by far the least enjoyable option. Have fun sitting trapped in your car while others switch to micromobility and literally arrive home faster than you while enjoying the breeze on their face and the money to spend on having fun instead.

    winkerjadams,

    Clearly you underestimate the size of america and how spaced out things are for the majority of people living here. Maybe in a city you are correct, but for most of us, this isn’t the case.

    qwrty,
    @qwrty@lemmy.world avatar

    Even in cities cars are the best way to get around in many American cities. This is because we built (bulldozed) our cities to be that way and neglect transit. Also, most people currently live in cities 🤓

    tiredofsametab,

    Yeah, I'm generally anti-car in urban areas, but the bus system where I used to live forced me to get a car to go to work (it would have taken like 2 hours 40 minutes and involve walking for a fair amount of that. each way.)

    lutillian,
    @lutillian@sh.itjust.works avatar

    Yeah, a lot of the in the Americas it’s not the fact that we’d rather be in a car it’s that our public transit options are just so non-competitive with driving by design that it makes no sense to ever use them from a time perspective if you can afford not to.

    If you live somewhere like the Bay area where you’ve got the BART or Chicago with the L, you can 100% use public transit as your daily driver because it’s actually faster then driving in most cases and you can read or do work while doing so… sadly this is not the case in most places. Takes me 15 minutes to drive into downtown, if I took the bus it would take me 2 and a half hours.

    Colorcodedresistor,

    You can’t take money with you when you die.

    fubo,

    To be fair, you can’t take the memories either.

    z00s,

    That’s fine, you can give it to me instead

    Weirdfish,

    Use windows + p to change the presentation settings on a laptop when connecting to a monitor or audio / video system. This lets you quickly change between laptop, dual display, and extended desktop.

    Windows + x and then b brings up a menu where you can turn on “presention” mode, preventing the laptop from going to sleep during a presentation.

    la508,

    Also Win + K brings up the casting option if you want to connect to something.

    Weirdfish,

    Is that for like mirrorop and such? I did not realise that.

    DaPorkchop_,

    And Ctrl+shift+alt+win+L to open LinkedIn (seriously, try it!)

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • asklemmy@lemmy.ml
  • PowerRangers
  • magazineikmin
  • InstantRegret
  • hgfsjryuu7
  • Durango
  • Youngstown
  • slotface
  • everett
  • thenastyranch
  • rosin
  • kavyap
  • khanakhh
  • mdbf
  • DreamBathrooms
  • anitta
  • vwfavf
  • ethstaker
  • tacticalgear
  • cubers
  • ngwrru68w68
  • modclub
  • cisconetworking
  • osvaldo12
  • GTA5RPClips
  • normalnudes
  • tester
  • Leos
  • provamag3
  • All magazines