is it a thing to plan your life with the idea "if I don't like the outcome of this, I can always choose to die", so you always end up doing what you like doing?
If you always look at death as a second option, you won't put as much effort into being happy because, in your mind, you won't have to deal with not being happy. If in your mind you will have to deal with not being happy, you'll put in more effort.
@towc Unfortunately it doesn't work like that, thinking that way make drives you to make destructive decisions that result in less happiness. It would make you less happy for the shorter amount of time that you're alive.
the way I see it, if you seriously consider suicide (which I don't, but hypothetically), you might as well do stuff that makes you happy without fearing the consequences
@ssube it is for me. I'm an absolute wreck when I'm being most productive, but I know when I sit back at the end of the day (or week or month [depending on task]) that it will all be worth it (or not and that's fine too). But at the very least I'll have something to show for it.
@ssube Yeah I can feel that sometimes but I can tell that's partly a maturity thing. Right now the thought of organizing the chaos during those times seems an impossible task
@Vap0r tbh, I just started using a todo list app to keep track of it. I've always been good at self motivating if I know what I need to do and having a list and score is enough.
I would use google appointments if it had an intelligent way to do tasks that I could check. So maybe every Friday it says "have you gotten (x) done yet today" and I could reply "no, remind me next week, or next saturday, or whatevs"
its not exactly something that would fit the needs. Things that Id expect to go on todo lists would be, for example: 1. Call back 123-456-789 order #12345 with information on the delivery time + time and date settings 2. Process return #123 3. answer unanswered emails from the morning etc.
1. wake up 2. do things in the bathroom 3. deal with that body from the night before 4. brush teeth 5. go to work 6. work 7. lunch 8. work 9. deny everything 10. find an alibi
@KamilSolecki todoist is good for that. My company is working on something similar as part of our scheduling tool, but that's tied into your scheduled shifts more than random tasks.
@rlemon I like how you deal with the body at step 3 and don't even care about an alibi until much later. Like brushing teeth and work are that much more important.
anyways. I fucked around with it, ignored the errors, moved past the stupid exit codes, and got some new sd card writers. 4 8gb images written in 750 seconds.
@KevinB fun stuff, I was updating products names (expanding them with product # and producer name) through the API about a month ago. All seemed to work out fine. After 2 or so hours I realized about 400 products had the same name :P
a common problem here is people creating a new product by entering the product name in the itemnumber field and the item number in the product name field
@OliverSalzburg that assumes people are logging into the console. If you're doing that and managing resources by hand, you're in for more pain than just where tags live.
@Vap0r I have data in the following contingency table. I was going to use a hypergeometric test to do some statistical significance test. However, I no longer have data for the 2nd row. And I'm lost on what would be a good test to do to see if the increase in gene expression between no radioation and increased radiation is significant.
@Vap0r I have data in the following contingency table. I was going to use a hypergeometric test to do some statistical significance test. However, I no longer have data for the 2nd row. And I'm lost on what would be a good test to do to see if the increase in gene expression between no radioation and increased radiation is significant.