mennorobert,

Most microwaves can be muted so the button pushes are all silent. You will have to look up how to on each microwave model but almost all models have a mute option.

lietuva,

Usually its holding start and stop buttons for a few seconds

bdkmshr,

I read somewhere you just have to long press zero on most model to mute them

5714,

Is this a joke my microwave is too analog to understand?

dion_starfire,

A partner of mine has an above-range microwave with the worst implementation of this that I’ve ever seen. When you mute the button beeps, it mutes the entire microwave. Food finished cooking? Silent. Manual timer set? Hope you’re looking to see when it hits zero. There’s no way to silence the buttons without muting all alerts completely.

18_24_61_b_17_17_4,
@18_24_61_b_17_17_4@lemmy.world avatar

Ugh, that’s how mine is too. All the noises or none at all.

BananaPeal,
@BananaPeal@sh.itjust.works avatar

In Windows 10 & 11, window+shift+S then draw a box to grab a quick, pre-cropped screenshot. It goes to your clipboard for easy paste and you get a notification you can click to view and save to file.

Bonus: use window+L at work to lock your desktop, preventing shenanigans.

chiliedogg,

Yeah, but they removed the “Ctrl+Alt+cursor” shortcut I used to use to punish people for leaving their computers unlocked.

bob_lemon,

That was part of the Intel integrated graphics program, not Windows.

Berttheduck,

What did this do?

chiliedogg,

Changed screen orientation. The cursor indicated which part of the monitor was the top of the screen, so with a standard monitor config “Ctrl+Alt+Down” flipped the screen, for instance.

Berttheduck,

Ahha of course. I remember using this to mess with people when I was in school. Thank you

mvirts,

Lol it’s still around, a graphics tray shortcut or something

starelfsc2,

I keep learning this exists and then instantly forgetting about it…

leanleft,
@leanleft@lemmy.ml avatar

basic windows knowledge may be needed unexpectedly someday

its_prolly_fine,

Drowning is very fast, seconds not minutes like in the movies. People in distress can take minutes before they are actively drowning. Active drowning is silent, they will not be yelling for help. It looks like the person is “climbing” or pushing down at the water. They will be vertical in the water and may be “bobbing”, going underwater and resurfacing. They will have their head tilted back parallel to the surface of the water.

If you see someone go under in open water keep looking at where they went under while calling for help, don’t take your eyes off it. If you are the only one who saw them go under, your job is to direct others to where they went down. In open water it’s very hard to find people because the bottom isn’t visible.

stewie3128,

If you see someone go overboard, get someone else to start throwing stuff off the deck to where they are in the water (while you keep pointing at them). Makes for much easier locating by others, and a quicker rescue

MBM,

We trained on this a lot. Also yelling “swim” because apparently the shock of sudden cold water can make you forget to do that.

everett,

Username does not check out.

Eylrid,

There’s a YouTube channel that shows videos of people drowning and being rescued so you can see what it looks like: youtube.com/

mvirts,

Also drowning can happen after inhalation of water. All incidents involving children being rescued from water may require medical intervention, even if they seem fine initially. “Dry drowning”

zer0hour,

Tires can get damaged internally and the only real way to tell is to dismount them from the rim. If there is internal damage they can potentially explode while being filled with air.

I see a lot of people filling up their tires while sitting straight infront of them and if they do explode it explodes straight outward. My tip is to connect the air gauge and then stand of to the side while filling, just in case.

prashanthvsdvn,

Tires being products that can directly affect consumer safety have very stringent rules about safety factor, which usually allows close to twice of rated pressure or load before they fail. So unless you are ballooning it to uncomfortable levels you should be fine.

The more credible danger from tires are if you constantly use them under inflated, which can cause them to separate out during transit causing loss of control in vehicle. So keep check of pressure once a week to rated pressure and you should be fine

Whirlybird,

Also tyres are literally the only part of the car that touches the road, so you should never cut corners and buy cheap tyres.

Hamartiogonic,
@Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz avatar

Too bad the little clip mechanism at the end of the hose is always broken or very loose. There’s no other way than to stand in front of the tire and presses the end of the hose with my hand.

kobra,

I have filled a lot of tires and I cannot think of a single time where I had appropriate equipment to inflate the tire from any position that wasn’t right in front of it.

Crotaro,

Don’t you fill your tires at the gas station? Here in Germany they have a stationary compressor with a hose (that doesn’t sound like it’s the correct word) that’s about 5 m or so and the buttons to fill in or release air are at the station itself. So you connect the valve and then have to get up and walk away to push the air in.

kobra,

America has a similar setup except our hoses don’t attach to the valves, we have to hold them. And if they do attach, there’s usually a squeeze valve we have to squeeze near the tire to ‘open’ the hose and allow air in. America’s setup seems designed to keep you near the tire.

Crotaro,

Interesting. I doubt my next statement, but I have to wonder if this is a setup that was carried over from when before gas stations were self-service (I was actually shocked how you used to not be allowed to refuel your own vehicle). Maybe something along the lines of “This setup is cheaper to run and if it’s only the underpaid employees complaining about a less-than-ideal way to fill up tires, that’s a cost I’m willing to eat.”

makingStuffForFun, (edited )
@makingStuffForFun@lemmy.ml avatar

In all my life I’ve only heard it now. My own little portable compressor, as I am 4wd travelling. Agree, before that I’ve never had that option, nor seen, or heard of a tyre exploding. Not to say it doesn’t happen.

Longpork_afficianado,

It happens far more with heavy vehicles than it does with cars. A truck tyre will be inflated to somewhere around 90psi, vs the 30ish a car tyre is. Fleet service technicians for heavy vehicles will place wheels inside a metal cage before inflating in order to contain any explosions which may occur.

makingStuffForFun,
@makingStuffForFun@lemmy.ml avatar

Sounds terrifying.

captain_aggravated,
@captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works avatar

The aircraft mechanic school I attended had a little cage to put tires in while inflating them. This is the only such thing I have ever seen including during aviation service in the field.

BodePlotHole,

Move the decimal point one number to the left. That’s 10% of the original number. Double that number to get 20% of the original number.

Now you have your tip.

secondaccountlemmy,

Tipping in the US is fucking wack. We have a service charge already on the bill and if i liked the service I tip, giving them more. Nobody should tip for standard service.

dan,

As a kid, I was taught to tip 15% for standard service. I still do that today.

20% is for exceptional service. 10% for mediocre. 2¢ for service that’s so bad they should probably think about getting a different job.

Anyway, getting 15% is still very easy. Get 10% the way you said. Now add half of that.

makingStuffForFun,
@makingStuffForFun@lemmy.ml avatar

Pay liveable wages like the rest of the developed world, with medical, retirement contributions, and taxes all sorted. Then you don’t have to tip.

oldbaldgrumpy,

No one has to tip.

TheAnonymouseJoker,
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

Then people turn out like your username in “developed” unbalanced countries.

NENathaniel,
@NENathaniel@lemmy.ca avatar

The cable is the weakest link of Earbuds for durability.

IEM’s with replaceable cables are readily available and getting very cheap & good these days (e.g. Moondrop Chu 2, Truthear Hola, etc)

Habahnow,

Whoa this is interesting. What kind of setup would you suggest for someone that wants: products that have replaceable parts (especially the cable), microphone, sound quality not being the most importantly aspect, being able to use while playing pc games? Seems i should get an iem with a cable that has a Mic, but maybe that’s a bad idea

NENathaniel,
@NENathaniel@lemmy.ca avatar

That’s not a bad idea if your setup allows for wired buds into a mic-compatible port.

You could look for buds with a mic cable or, of course you could just replace the cable with one with a mic.

Habahnow,

Would you happen to have any product recommendations? I’m new to IEMs and kind nof don’t know where to look, and which brands are decent. I appreciate any info you provide!

Wootz,

Better yet, you can get Bluetooth ear hooks for both 2-pin and MMCX IEMs, if you ever want to lose the cable. They last longer than airpod types, offer better sound quality, and you can replace them without replacing the IEMs themselves.

0_0j,
@0_0j@lemmy.world avatar

offer better sound quality,

The hisssssesss

Can you recommend the ones that dont have these hisssesss

Wootz,

The UTWS3 hooks I have now are AptX based, and they don’t seem to have a noise floor that I can hear in the slightest.

0_0j,
@0_0j@lemmy.world avatar

Thanks

NENathaniel,
@NENathaniel@lemmy.ca avatar

I’ve yet to try these myself but I definitely like the concept. Mostly worried about the weight & comfort, plus large case size (I have the Sony XM5 and love how tiny and pocketable the case is)

Wootz,

I like it a lot.

I have pretty narrow ear canals, so I can’t really wear airpods without fear of them flying out while biking. The ear hook design solves that. I misplaced a pair of KZ AZ09s on holiday this summer, but I’ve since replaced them with a set of Fiio UTWS3.

I have nothing but good things to say. The weight of the Bluetooth hooks negligible, especially because the majority of the weight is resting on your ears. I hardly feel them when I’m use (besides the feeling of the actual IEMs in my ears), and having a button on each ear is really convenient.

The case is on the big side, but it fits well enough in my pockets to not be that big of a deal. The battery in the units are big enough to last for ages, and the battery in the case being an actual big battery means I charge them once a month, at most.

strawberry,

there's a chu 2? I love must chu should i getta the 2

NENathaniel,
@NENathaniel@lemmy.ca avatar

2 is a lil bassier, perhaps slightly too bassy for my taste but still great.

Still just as comfortable as the original and the new cable is much nicer

strawberry,

sweet, light Havel to grab them. Still $20?

NENathaniel,
@NENathaniel@lemmy.ca avatar

Yea like $26 Canadian, great value.

I work retail and usually rec my customers don’t buy the cheap bullshit we have and buy those instead

TheAnonymouseJoker,
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

Really intelligent frugal advice for those that have no clue. There are other great value pairs like Tin C3, Tin T3+, Tangzu Wan’er as well. I got myself my KZ ZST Pros about 3-4 years ago precisely because of this, and the official KZ 2-pin replacement cable costing $8 is amazeballs.

Personally, I am venturing into Yincrow X6 ($12), as they are the most repairable earbuds, have good bass WITH open earbud (Apple earbud) design, allow environmental sound awareness, and have the most common earbud shell of all time - MX500/Vido.

lemmybenny,

Control + Backspace deletes entire words rather than individual characters

nublug,

similarly if you’re using arrow keys to move the cursor where you want, ctrl + arrow key moves you along word by word instead of letter by letter.

Aurenkin,

Ctrl + shift + v to strip formatting before pasting (can be application dependent)

FIST_FILLET,

think it’s cmd+alt+shift+v for our mac friends

dQw4w9WgXcQ,

For a key-combo I’ve found handy:

shift + ins = a more general paste-command. While ctrl + v works in most Microsoft-contexts, shift + ins seems to work both in MS Windows, Command prompt, Linux and several other systems.

riskable,
@riskable@programming.dev avatar

In bash, it’s alt-backspace 👍

SevFTW,

Control + Arrows also moves your text cursor by whole words. Combine it with shift and you can easily select a bunch of text without the mouse.

Another one that took me far too long to learn: Shift + Tab will do the same thing as tab (next element) in reverse

HeneryHawk,

CTRL + Shift + Home/End will select all to the start/end of a document. I use that one a lot

minthenry,

Also shift+pos1/end selects whole rows or parts from where the cursor is.

BassaForte,
@BassaForte@lemmy.world avatar

Learn vim and you can completely forget this information

russjr08,

And once you do, you can use them in bash by running (or adding to your ~/.bashrc) set -o vi!

xthexder,
@xthexder@l.sw0.com avatar

It’s the Home/End keys on US keyboard layouts. I use them all the time when coding.

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