When I was a kid, my dad had a friend who had been a carpenter, and retired, but he would still hang doors. He said the amount of money he could charge for that made it worth doing them.
Very, very different. With tri-tip, you're going to want to get it like 5 degrees from medium rare, then sear it on a grill or pan. It's a very short smoke.
Brisket is a very long smoke, easily 16+ hours, and it's easy to mess up. I usually recommend people do a pork shoulder (pulled pork) before brisket. You cook it exactly the same way, just a different rub, but the meat is much more forgiving and much cheaper (still delicious). Get that dialed in, then do the brisket.
If you're not sure about the hassle, the electric ones that look like a mini fridge work pretty well and hold a temp like an oven. No charcoal, just chips. You won't get a smoke ring on red meat, but it's a myth that a ring has anything to do with flavor.
It's very important, but overnight isn't really necessary. I pull them from the fridge, wash the curing stuff off, pat them dry with paper towels, put them on a drying rack, and let them sit while I get the smoker ready and the smoke goes from white to blue, and they come up to room temperature. Seems to work fine that way.
We had a dog that was born deaf, so we taught him with hand signals instead of voice commands. Was completely fine, except when he was doing something he knew he shouldn't, he'd turn away from you so you couldn't scold him. But he'd also get curious about whether you caught him doing it, so he'd sneak a look over his shoulder, and then you could scold him and he'd stop.
Oh, I'm with you, and I don't need or want the endless growth thing. I was on Reddit a long time, and saw the good and bad of the huge user base.
But it's kind of like when you have a favorite neighborhood restaurant: you don't want it to get so successful that it's always crowded and you can't get a table, but you also want it to do well enough that it stays in business. If the Lemmy use base declines too much, there won't be a reason for people to come here and we'll lose our little corner of the Internet.
I honestly never look at the AI results because they're so flawed so often. I don't have an awful lot of problems finding answers to things with a standard search and then scrolling past any sources that are often crap. Worth noting, by the way, that search results, especially Google's, were way more accurate several years ago, before there were so many sponsored results and they had agendas to push. So technologically, it's a fixable situation, it's just the enshitificaiton problem.
I'm an old fart - I got my degree in CS in 1985, and I've been paying attention to the predictions and advancements in AI for a very long time. I have at least as much issue with the way people think and talk about it as the author, but probably less of an issue with it being called AI. Remember that for decades, the informal working definition of AI was "A computer doing anything that usually requires a human." So for ages, they said we'd have AI if a computer could read a page of printed text out loud in English. That seemed almost unattainable when it was first talked about, but now it's so trivial that no one would consider it AI.
People have tried to make definitions that are crisper than that, but few if any of those definitions requires anything we'd call "thinking." The frustrating thing is that the general public talks all the time about AI as if it's conscious . Even when we're talking about its flaws, we use words like "hallucinating," which is something only thinking beings can do.
To me, LLMs are the worst things because to so many people they seem like the are (or could be) thinking entities. They respond to questions in a lifelike manner and can construct (extrapolate?) somewhat novel responses. But they're also the least useful to us as a society. I'm much more interested in the Machine Learning applications for distilling gobs of data to develop new medicines or identify critical items in images that humans don't have the mental bandwidth for. But LLMs get all the press.
COVID/flu symptoms are the same symptoms as a lot of things, so hard to say anything about what they have based on those symptoms. If their doctor is decent, your best advice is to just let them do their thing. You're not going to get a useful diagnosis from the Lemmy community.
I should stop there, but I came here to answer the title of your post. Yes, my dad died of something they never figured out. Was very strange.
I'm sure there are a number of "we can't allow gay sex because we'd all be having it if it was allowed and everyone should resist the sin like me" people, but there really are a lot of folks who feel it takes something away from them if others get what they have. It's like the mentality of the guy who loves his BMW until his neighbor gets one too, and then he has to get a more expensive car.
It's really gross how many people think everything in life is a zero sum game. The anti gay marriage folks are like that: if gay people can get married then somehow their own marriage is lesser. If people who aren't working get healthcare, then it somehow takes away from them. It's disgusting.
I've long thought one of the things that led to the sorry state we're in today was the advent of cable TV. In the days you're talking about, three or four networks were competing for the same viewers, and none of them could afford to alienate a big hunk of people, so they all tried to at least appear objective. With cable, there were so many stations that one could go after some niche and do fine, so we got stations that barely even made a pretence of being news, rather than propaganda, and people tuned in to hear whatever confirmed their existing narratives.
I guess I'm not at all into supernatural stuff, so I wouldn't think "creepy" as in ghosts, but I'd for sure be wondering if there was someone waiting away from the door to cause me problems if I stepped out to look without locking the door behind me. And I don't live in a place where that kind of thing is common.
Apparently it's a lot of things. Maybe why such a popular pattern.