Opinionhaver

joined 6 months ago
 

The gear range on this 10-speed 11–36T cassette is completely insufficient for a heavy e-fatbike like this, so I’m upgrading to an 11-speed 11–51T.

Also, I was surprised to find out that the Shimano Deore RD-M5100 derailleur, while it does have a clutch, doesn’t have a cage lock.

[–] Opinionhaver@feddit.uk 2 points 1 week ago

Thanks! I'm pretty happy how it turned out as well. I hope this one will be even better.

Here's few more pics if you're interested.

[–] Opinionhaver@feddit.uk 2 points 1 week ago

I possibly could but I haven't given up on it just yet so I don't want to disassemble it into pieces before I've at least attempted to fix the frame.

I bought a 32T chainring to replace the 38T one and see how much that helps. If it's still too stiff then I'll just convert it into 11x1 with a 11 - 50 cassette so then with the 38T chainring it has the same gear ratio as my old bike and I might try then using the 32T chainring for winter driving for when there more need for torque rather than speed.

[–] Opinionhaver@feddit.uk 2 points 1 week ago (2 children)

The "paintjob" you see on my old bike isn't paint. I have an uncontrollable urge to make my posessions unique looking and with bikes that means a duct tape camo paintjob.

 

The boring-looking one is the “new” one - even though it’s actually two years older than the “old” one.

I snapped the frame on my previous bike, so I bought another almost identical one - as one does when they don’t learn from their mistakes.

My old one has a 12x1 drivetrain, while the new one has a 10x1, and the gearing ratio is awful. It’s way too stiff to pedal uphill, even in the lowest gear. I’ll start by swapping the front chainring for a smaller one, but I might end up converting it to an 11x1 or 12x1 setup later on.

Other than that, there’s just a ton of duct taping to do.





[–] Opinionhaver@feddit.uk 2 points 1 week ago

Plumber by training, but these days I work as a self-employed general contractor / handyman.

My thinking is that companies looking for employees get flooded with nearly identical applications, so it’s hard to stand out. I’d rather just email, call, or even show up in person and ask for work - whether they’re actively hiring or not. It shows initiative.

Honestly, I didn’t even want the position - I only applied to keep my unemployment payments going. I spent maybe five minutes writing the application and still got the interview.

[–] Opinionhaver@feddit.uk 3 points 1 week ago (5 children)

Last time I was looking for job I just looked up companies from my field and sent them an email. I sent two emails and got 1 interview. Didn't get the place though, so I just employed myself then.

[–] Opinionhaver@feddit.uk 1 points 1 week ago

Why do you need to be such a mean jerk about it? I’m familiar with the saying - I just misunderstood you at first, and I already acknowledged my mistake. What more do you want?

[–] Opinionhaver@feddit.uk 3 points 1 week ago

We seem to be finding our way into echo chambers just fine without algorithms or big tech as well.

[–] Opinionhaver@feddit.uk 5 points 1 week ago

I believe that, in reality, wolves domesticated themselves. They started hanging around humans because it was a mutually beneficial arrangement.

[–] Opinionhaver@feddit.uk 6 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Dogs and wolves are the same specie - just a different subspecie. A Chihuahua could breed with a wolf.

[–] Opinionhaver@feddit.uk 1 points 1 week ago (5 children)

Fair enough. "This is gonna twist so many incel knives" just made it sound like that's what you were refering to.

[–] Opinionhaver@feddit.uk 4 points 1 week ago

One of the main issues in the current AI discussion is user expectations. Most people aren’t familiar with the terminology. They hear “AI” and immediately think of some superintelligent system running a space station in a sci-fi movie. Then they hear that ChatGPT gives out false information and conclude it’s not intelligent - and therefore not even real AI.

What they fail to consider is that AI isn’t any one thing. It’s an extremely broad term. It simply refers to any system designed to perform a cognitive task that would normally require a human. The chess opponent on an old Atari console is an AI. It’s an intelligent system - but only narrowly so. Narrow AI can have superhuman cognitive abilities, but only within the specific task it was built for, like playing chess.

A large language model like ChatGPT is also a narrow AI. It’s exceptionally good at what it was designed to do: generate natural-sounding language. It often gets things right - not because it knows anything, but because its training data contains a lot of correct information. That accuracy is an emergent byproduct of how it works, not its intended function.

What people expect from it, though, isn’t narrow intelligence - it’s general intelligence: the ability to apply cognitive ability across a wide range of domains, like a human can. That’s something LLMs simply can’t do - at least not yet. Artificial General Intelligence is the end goal for many AI companies, but AGI and LLMs are not the same thing, even though both fall under the umbrella of AI.

[–] Opinionhaver@feddit.uk -1 points 1 week ago (7 children)

Incel violence isn't really the epidemic you're making it sound to be. There have even been papers written about the lack of it.

 

Can be one that already exists or a completely custom one.

 

I'll fight anyone who claims otherwise.

 

Everyone likes to believe they’re thinking independently. That they’ve arrived at their beliefs through logic, self-honesty, and some kind of epistemic discipline. But here’s the problem - that belief itself is suspiciously comforting. So how can you tell it’s true?

What if your worldview just happens to align neatly with your temperament, your social environment, or whatever gives you emotional relief? What if your reasoning is just post-hoc justification for instincts you already wanted to follow? That’s what scares me - not being wrong, but being convinced I’m right for reasons that are more about mood than method.

It reminds me of how people think they’d intervene in a violent situation - noble in theory, but until it happens, it's all just talk. So I’m asking: what’s your actual evidence that you think the way you think you do? Not in terms of the content of your beliefs, but the process behind them. What makes you confident you’re reasoning - not just rationalizing?

 

Made by YouTuber Cyber Hooligan

 

If you have investments, let’s treat those as liquid cash for the sake of argument. Otherwise, the assumption is that you’re not selling property or possessions, but continuing to live as you do now.

 

I tried to hollow it out as much as possible to cut down on weight, while still making sure it’s overbuilt enough to support the corner of a 2000 kg pickup truck. I’m planning to use 98 × 48 mm lumber.

Open to suggestions on how to improve it. My only concern is the stop block - it’s not any higher than the previous steps. I could make the tire sit deeper in that “well,” but that would reduce the overall height.

 

Zinc primer, acrylic base coat, and 2K clear coat.

What I learned:

  • Don’t cheap out on the paint and clear coat. The difference in quality between box-store products and real automotive ones can’t be overstated. They’re as much of higher quality than they're more expesive.

  • Buy more product than you think you’ll need. Just do it.

  • Surface prep, surface prep, surface prep. Paint and clear coat don’t hide imperfections at all. If you can feel it with your fingers, you’ll see it through the paint.

  • Avoid “smart 2K” products where you don’t need to mix in the hardener. I’ve tried them twice and both times got terrible results. It’s not that they don’t work, but they’re really finicky if you don’t know exactly what you’re doing.

  • Close the doors so bugs don’t fly in, and wet the floor/ground to keep dust from getting airborne.

  • Cover the entire vehicle before painting. Overspray dust goes everywhere and settles on every unprotected surface - ask me how I know.

  • Keep an eye on the spray nozzle and wipe it down occasionally. If it starts gunking up, it’ll spit droplets and ruin your finish.

 

I don't get why anyone would want to listen to this kind on noise.

 

The "dead internet" theory gets thrown around a lot these days especially by people critical of AI. The worry is that large language models and bots will flood the web with so much synthetic content that real human interaction will disappear - that everything will become artificial, empty, and repetitive.

But I’d argue we’re already well into that phase - and it didn’t take AI to get us here.

Originality is rare. Most content is recycled, reposted, reformatted like an endless stream of re-runs. Even the way people respond has become increibly predictable. You can write something mildly controversial or just unfamiliar, and you already know what you’re going to get: knee-jerk downvotes, the same tired comebacks, some vague accusation about your motives or identity - not a genuine engagement with the point. People don’t seem to read anymore so much as scan for whether you’re “one of them” or not.

And that’s the thing. Most users aren’t engaging with ideas - they’re running scripts. They’ve absorbed certain patterns from years online and now just execute them reflexively: a snarky quote from a meme here, a one-liner they saw get upvotes last week there. It’s social media call-and-response. And it’s killing the internet way more effectively than any AI could.

And yes, I already know how some people will respond to this - with some version of “I’ve never had those issues, maybe you’re the problem.” But never facing pushback isn’t a flex when you’ve been conditioned to avoid it. It’s like priding yourself on never failing when in reality you’ve never even taken a risk. Of course it feels like everything is fine if you’ve learned how to blend in. You’ve trained yourself not to touch the wire. That doesn’t disprove the problem. It is the problem.

 

God damnit, that was an expensive ride.

Now I’m trying to find one identical to this so I can use it for parts. I just hope this isn’t a common issue with this frame and that I just got unlucky with mine.

Would’ve been an easy fix if the frame were steel - but from what I understand, welding isn’t really an option with these alloy frames.

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