It's a play on the phrase "Works with most everything!"
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- 3 yr. ago
A few names: "I didn't do that" "Works with most nothing" "Damages not guaranteed" "Left as an exercise for the reader" "Debugged for your pleasure" "Designed for failure" "Title not withstanding" "Frankly, I don't know what's going on" "Woke up too late"
I'm not sure I understand your feelings, but I'm going to offer uninformed advice anyway.
First of all, what does an 'alternative option' mean? Does the rest of your family pick a single thing off the menu, and you're embarrassed you don't want to eat the same thing, or is it more like you go by the drive through of another restaurant than everybody else? Picking different options off the same menu is generally the norm where I am, so I don't think other people would find it that weird. If it's the latter, I think most people would interpret that as you making a strong effort to engage and be supportive of your family, even it's difficult for you.
As for your family being concerned about the amount you eat, there are a couple ways you could approach it. The easiest way would probably be lying about having eaten before. People are very unlikely to be concerned about you eating too little if you say you already ate beforehand. It can be a little bit rude if you know someone will be cooking in advance, though.
The second option would be saying you have a slow metabolism. This option wouldn't completely stop your family worrying about your food intake, but over a long period of time your family will probably pick up the hint.
The third option would be to increase your metabolism through exercise, so you're more hungry and eat more. This is kind of a weird option, but it also gets close to the root of the problem.
Regardless of which option you take, it seems like your family is trying to accommodate you, even if they're doing it poorly. In these situations, being direct and honest can be very useful, since they are likely to accept your feedback. First of all, try to examine all the support they are already giving. If there are any situations when they anticipate your needs accurately, tell them that those situations are very helpful for you. If there are any situations where that isn't the case, try and tell them why it went wrong and if you actually want support in that case. A very useful phrase is "I need to learn how to do X on my own." It both explains why you want them to stop, while at the same time it doesn't imply they've done anything wrong. Lastly, regarding the restaurant thing, try to be clear about your feelings, why you are embarrassed, and if you want help trying to solve that issue. They will probably try to brainstorm different ways to ease your embarrassment, and they might have different ideas than you.
If your family is being earnest about trying to help, the best thing you can be is earnest about the help you need.
What's your preferred default pronoun? As far as I'm aware, there isn't a universally accepted replacement, since any pronoun comes with drawbacks. 'he' & 'she' are gendered, 'it' typically refers to non-sentient things, and 'they' can cause confusion about number. Of course, there's also neopronouns, but people have come up with a billion, and there's no consensus or standard, so I can't confirm the person I'm talking to will understand.
Supported typing/facilitated communication is widely regarded as a pseudoscience. Studies have shown that FC is unable to produce answers not known by the facilitator. FC proponents believe that autistic individuals have the same linguistic ability as neurotypical individuals, and difficulty speaking is merely a motor issue.
As someone with autism, I can tell you: my brain can barely keep up with conversation. It's not a motor issue. I have to actively think about appropriate word choice, how to structure sentences correctly, and neurotypicals don't. If I don't take enough time to finish the sentence in my head, the intonation is wrong, I'll skip words, put them out of order, and just generally be unintelligible.
FC, like many other 'theories' surrounding autism, are made by people who have put years into researching autism, but have never thought to ask an autistic person anything about their experience.
Source: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facilitated_communication
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I thought about that, but I don't think that makes sense in this situation. The wings and arms must use different muscle groups, and the biceps would be used for the arms, not the wings. Furthermore, since the wings are on the back of Pit, the muscles would either have to wrap around the rib cage or go through them, constricting the lungs.
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Tiny wings are very much capable of lifting heavy things, but they have to flap super quickly. Humming birds have really tiny wings compared to their size, but since they never glide, it's not important. The bigger issue is the position of the wings.
Since the line between the center of mass and center of force (the wings) is not perfectly vertical, Pit would lean forward during flight. His body would be suspended under his wings. This means his body is blocking most of the wind generated by his wings. So he would have to exert even more force to stay flying. Plus, your arms would get super sore when all that force is pushing them forward.
It should also be noted that Put doesn't have the musculature to support this level of force. His biceps are connected to his arms, not his wings, so he must have a separate set of muscles specifically for his wings. The only suitable anchor points are his ribs and spine, but in no art do we see the require muscle groups around his shoulder blades.
In short: I don't think this is real, guys.
I'm aware of that, but what I don't know is if background processing usually interferes with regular processing. I do occasionally step back from a problem specifically to let my subconscious process it, but that doesn't typically come at the cost of other things I can think about; It doesn't cause me to see, think, or do any mental processing worse.
I don't think a 'zero-sum game' ever occurs for other people's subconscious problem solving.
The double-down is so much worse than the original statement.
I really like that lemmy is small enough that I can recognize people by their individual writing style—Hello, thorn guy!
My dyspraxia (and dysgraphia) aren't very pronounced, but they're in that range where I am significantly less coordinated than other people, but not enough that people recognize the disability. I didn't even know I had dysgraphia until my senior year of highschool, and my mom refused to believe I had dyspraxia.
Whenever I draw on a digital tablet, I have to use fast arcs and lines because my hands wobble too much when I draw slow, intentional lines.
I've been practicing the piano recently. I wouldn't say I can play the piano, since I can't associate each key with the note they play, but I am apparently good at improvising. I can't use two hands at the same time, and when I play too fast my fingers press the keys in the wrong order, but I am slowly getting better.
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I struggle to learn rust because the semantics and syntax are just so awful. I would love to be enthusiastic about rust, since every seems to love it, but I can't get over that hurdle. Backporting the features into C, or even just making a transpiler from C to rust that uses annotations would be great for me. But the rust community really does not seem interested in making stepping stones from other languages to rust.
From my experience, being "good" at vibe coding is more about being unable to detect flaws in AI generated code rather than being able to code well. Add AI to the workflow of someone who actually understands scalability and maintenance and that won't be able to get past a couple functions before they drop the AI.
Also, assuming this kid gets weekends off, he would be writing 12k lines of code each day. I don't think the average programmer could even review that number of lines in a day, so there's likely no actual supervision for what the kid is feeding into the codebase.
I'd estimate within four months the project will be impenetrable, and they'll scrap the whole thing.
The best answer I've heard. It is both a "you don't care about the answer, so I'll just give you a canned response" answer and a direct commentary about the social ritual.
I'm not sure I'd classify this comic as slightly racist, since the tonto-like character is being treated the same as the other two white sidekicks.
I don't understand how not using a keyword to define a function causes the meaning to change depending on imports. I've never run into an issue like that before. Can you give an example?
GIF compression is endearing, though. It only has 256 colors, but it tries its hardest anyway.