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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 3rd, 2023

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    1. The skerton was (is?) A good entry level grinder that will give you very decent results especially for immersion-type brews. It’s what I started on and what I still use for on the go use cases. I haven’t looked at entry level hand grinders in a while so I guess some developments have happened since I got mine. (Based on a comparison video from james hoffman at the time)

    2. God yes, I tried a friend’s 1zpresso and the difference in both grind speed and effort is noticable.








  • If you get prep time you could set up some traps.

    Assuming both sides see it as a fight to the death, the horse will also engage so you could just run away into a bunch of traps. All you need is for the horse to injure a leg in one trap and it’s done for. I think even just some holes with a couple spikes would be enough to injure and maybe even sprain an ankle.

    Without prep time you’re pretty doomed, I think your best bet is either climbing up a tree to buy you some prep time to make a spear out of the branches or worst case diving in, aiming to do damage to its legs (unlikely) and hope you are able to get out without being trampled (unlikely)






  • Context: I’m european. I know for sure the people at my local coffee shops are being paid a living wage, cause there’s laws for that.

    Paying your employees a living wage is included in what I see as “a sustainable business model”.

    I know the owner of my local coffee shop personally and while they charge €4 or more depending on the coffee you’re getting AND they roast their own coffee, so they cut down on the bean costs significantly while generating some extra profits as well by selling the beans, they still aren’t “just raking it in” as you make it seem.


  • A coffee from a coffee shop definitely should be $4 if you want them to ethically source good coffee and have a sustainable business model.

    There’s still cheap, shitty coffee that’s built on modern slavery there’s always like mcdo. SB is the same quality ingredients but with knowing how to steam milk + syrups




  • Does commercial mean closed source in this context though? It seems like a waste of resources not to provide the source code for an rtos.

    Considering how small in size they tend to be + with their power/computational constraints I can’t imagine they have very effective DRM in place so it shouldn’t take that much to reverse engineer.

    May as well just provide the source under some very restrictive license.