it was one simple job

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0CGrzJAd2nk
If your house hasn’t collapsed, you do not have too many power supplies. If it does, well, you bought one too many. Return the last one you bought, and rebuild.
Quote from: Brumby on January 24, 2018, 04:30:58 pm
Some suggestions....
RAM: Random Access Management. The process of locating various pieces of test equipment in a manner so that they are quickly and easily accessible. This process can be applied to both equipment storage areas as well as the active work bench. Failure to implement a RAM protocol will result in equipment getting buried, requiring the moving of several other pieces of equipment to gain access to a specific item or, even worse, to prevent that specific item from being found. (SNIP)
TETRIS: Test Equipment Torment - Reorganization In Situ. The equivalent of changing spark plugs while driving down the highway, this is the high stress process of rearranging equipment - but being limited to doing so in the existing space. Any attempt to 'borrow' space in another area of the premises is met with threats of items found outside the boundaries of toleration will be immediately disposed of. Protests are met with references to some storage area that was temporarily borrowed 3 years ago - that you still occupy.
BOT: Boundaries Of Toleration. The limits of acceptability for the physical and/or financial impact of one's hobby - as defined by other members of the household.
Quote from: mnementh on January 26, 2018, 04:17:46 am
The nature of my Electronics/RC Hobby workbench make it a perpetual TETRIS zone; I call it "Organized Chaos" while my wife calls it "A study in Surrealism". That is, when she does more than just give me that "Spock Raised Eyebrow" look. Similarly, the needs of Laundry & Storage space make my Wood-Metal-Welding Shop/Garage into a combination JENGA: Junk Engulfing Nearby Garage Areas (wherein all garage space is subject to a constantly moving and contested scrimmage line) and DMZ: De-Mobilized Zone (wherein all manner of junk accumulates in precisely the perfect manner to produce a nigh-immovable obstruction between you and some object you desperately need).
These three phenomena form a symbiotic Quantum Entanglement; whenever there is a decrease in one, the others increase to eliminate any net free space.
JENGA is not a simple single entity; it encompasses a constellation of several sub-phenomena:
JENGA: Junk Encroaching Nonpermissible General Areas (usually defined by other household members and their "need" to use nonessential spaces like living rooms, kitchens and bathrooms);
JENGA: Junk Engulfing Nonvertical Geometric Areas (the inevitable spontaneous accumulation of all manner of tools and junk on any available table-like horizontal surface);
JENGA: Junk Emigrating Non-Garage Areas (the inexplicable migration of entire stacks to other rooms, often discovered by other household members with a hand truck still underneath); and quite possibly the most relevant,
JENGA: Junk Engulfing Nonhorizontal Growth Areas (the accumulation of box-shaped objects stacked from floor to ceiling, and the inevitable need to remove one object from the middle of the stack without all of it falling down on your head).
Your discovery of the BOT phenomenon and my own observations of how it seems to ebb and flow in relation with the frequency and severity of localised TETRIS and JENGA outbreaks makes me suspect that it may also be part of this quantum entanglement; I think we as a group should make an empirical study and publish our findings.
We'll need a number of households and lots of time to document various types of outbreaks against the general BOT level in each household and cumulatively. This will require many data points collated against several timelines; possibly years of accumulated junk... err, data... to be absolutely sure. :-DD
On the advice of counsel, I decline comment….Zenith wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 11:27 am If you can still move, there's space for more TE.
A danger sign is when you can't enter some rooms because they are completely full of TE. When the living room enters that state, things may have gone too far but you can get temporary relief by putting back together and replacing the covers of all the unfinished projects. You can make more space by throwing away some of the furniture.
The load on floors and ceilings has to be considered.
Consider yourself lucky, it used to be the head of an infidel, and guess who in the vicinity probably looked most like an infidel?
Sounds like Buzkashi, the national game of Afghanistan. There are two sides but they are not teams; the sides are there for a convenient way of organising things. Someone else on your side scoring by dragging the carcass through the goalposts, is worth little more than someone on the other side scoring.
Similar but not quite the same. It's called kokboru. We discovered very quickly that there are no rules. Feet in the face, whipping the opponents and ramming them is all on the tableZenith wrote: ↑Tue Jun 06, 2023 10:22 pmSounds like Buzkashi, the national game of Afghanistan. There are two sides but they are not teams; the sides are there for a convenient way of organising things. Someone else on your side scoring by dragging the carcass through the goalposts, is worth little more than someone on the other side scoring.
It's good to know that you are back safe and sound, and that you had an enjoyable time.
Oh I was ok on that. There was a SQL Server DBA in the group. He was top infidel lookalike.
Life does disappear quickly.
Careful. Soon you'll be espousing that libertarian nonsense, "shared space" roads.
I doubt that view has changed. Reinforced, certainly, but not changed.Currently facing a whole week of planning meetings which I know don't mean anything or matter so I'm not turning up.
I've occasionally thought it would be worth upping sticks and decamping to somewhere idyllic. Then I realise the people there's a lot of unconstrained viciousness in the people there. I wish libertarians that want "much less government" would actually go to places where there is much less government.We're planning another trip somewhere remote now to get the feeling back![]()
How was the fermented horse milk?bd139 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 8:23 pm Back. We didn't die. Nearly did a couple of times (rock slide, getting lost as our guide was a moron). Amazing trip in all respects and amazing people. Took 1500 photos over the week. Pulled out a couple quickly. So so so many things happened it's impossible to start describing what we did.
Short list: day in post-Soviet Bishkek, 6h drive to Kochkor, stay overnight at guest house, 3 days walking + on horseback + tent camping through the mountains finishing with a totally treacherous climb to 11,860ft Terme pass in bad conditions (pictured selfie). Had to slide half way down on our arses on the snow. Descended to Song-Kul lake and spent 2 days with Kyrgyz people in their yurts and watching them playing their native sport of rugby/polo with a dead goat ball on horseback (pictured), 8h drive back via Naryn to Bishkek (pictured landscape), Hotel for the night and back on the plane back.
So so happy![]()
Definitely not!tggzzz wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 7:48 amCareful. Soon you'll be espousing that libertarian nonsense, "shared space" roads.
I've got enough ammo to be completely untouchable at this pointtggzzz wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 7:48 amI doubt that view has changed. Reinforced, certainly, but not changed.Currently facing a whole week of planning meetings which I know don't mean anything or matter so I'm not turning up.
Sounds like you are angling for constructive dismissal in reverseThat's what email trails and dictaphones in the shirt pocket were invented.
Well there is and there isn't. It depends on where you are culturally. Less government isn't a good idea. It's there to perform valuable functions in society. What are problems are efficiency and corruption which is rife. My point is more that a lot of our existence is completely wasted on pointless procedural stuff to tick boxes that don't need to exist. That needs to be reduced considerably. My time is not valued, but it is priceless to me.tggzzz wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 7:48 amI've occasionally thought it would be worth upping sticks and decamping to somewhere idyllic. Then I realise the people there's a lot of unconstrained viciousness in the people there. I wish libertarians that want "much less government" would actually go to places where there is much less government.We're planning another trip somewhere remote now to get the feeling back![]()
Unfortunately one traditional escape route has become unavailable: lighthouses are unmanned. And probably available on AirBNB
Sartre was wise: hell is other people.
Thanks. The kumis was, err, interesting. An acquired taste. Needed to be washed down with some disinfectant (vodka).BU508A wrote: ↑Wed Jun 07, 2023 8:39 amHow was the fermented horse milk?bd139 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 8:23 pm Back. We didn't die. Nearly did a couple of times (rock slide, getting lost as our guide was a moron). Amazing trip in all respects and amazing people. Took 1500 photos over the week. Pulled out a couple quickly. So so so many things happened it's impossible to start describing what we did.
Short list: day in post-Soviet Bishkek, 6h drive to Kochkor, stay overnight at guest house, 3 days walking + on horseback + tent camping through the mountains finishing with a totally treacherous climb to 11,860ft Terme pass in bad conditions (pictured selfie). Had to slide half way down on our arses on the snow. Descended to Song-Kul lake and spent 2 days with Kyrgyz people in their yurts and watching them playing their native sport of rugby/polo with a dead goat ball on horseback (pictured), 8h drive back via Naryn to Bishkek (pictured landscape), Hotel for the night and back on the plane back.
So so happy![]()
![]()
Glad, that both of you are back AND happy!
I hope you can still find your way around London.![]()