Seigest

joined 2 years ago
[–] Seigest@lemmy.ca 3 points 4 months ago

Heres the links so you don't have to open the article

https://mummymeegz.com/ https://thevegancandyman.com/

[–] Seigest@lemmy.ca 16 points 4 months ago (5 children)

Hardly seems like a priority, I'm a bit disappointed to see the NPD wasting efforts on road. We need more tracks and trains.

Though if they are certain it's a worthy concession to get swing voters then it's got to happen. I just think the next time the conservatives take power they'll just sell it again.

[–] Seigest@lemmy.ca 3 points 4 months ago

Classic Loading Ready Run. Still a fan of their sketches.

[–] Seigest@lemmy.ca 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I'm the system admin of a non profit myself. Honestly there's a lot more we can do to cut cost. But theres a cost in cutting cost.

For example. Sometime prior to COVID, and prior to me working there, my organization needed a "common digital service" (being purposely vague here for privacy). In order to build oversight reports to our ministry we needed a separate reporting service so the ministry could get the data they wanted in order to keep paying us. We also then needed a third service to store all the data since the other 2 didn't want to do that part.

So our "Common digital service" was now composed of 3 systems. Issues grew pretty quickly after the initial set up. Despite these systems being "partners" every time an issue came up they'd endlessly blame each other and refuse to fix the cause of the issue. They would offer to correct the data for a fee. Since we were legally mandated to maintain the data they'd often pay the fees. It was like these big companies came along, and collaborated a scheme to extort money out of this non profit. No one there was tech savvy enough to notice.

When I came there I figured this out. Mostly because I was previously employed at one of the companies involved. Legal action wasn't an option. But I found a company that does all three parts of the system. They can't do the blame loop thing and they were way cheaper overall. Easy fix right? Nope.

As a non profit we are required to hire a third party requisition organization. The process of even getting the new system contract took well over a year. This is required so non profits don't just take bribes and such.

Then comes migration. The slow process of taking data from system A and putting it on system B. They used very different structures so it was a lot of manual work for a small team. We can't just hire new people or even temp staff so it's tonnes of overtime.

So consider all the extra cost in this story, things moved way slower, extra services had to be hired, overtime had to be paid. It is a lot of bureaucratic stuff that private companies don't have to deal with. But that extra cost is the cost of preventing corruption. The only way we could fix the broken system was to get a huge initial investment from the ministry to fix things.

I'm saying I agree or disagree with this but that's how things work. And if an organization is dependent on donations alone it's probably got a lot of overhead like this. Things they cant fix untill they can afford to fix them.

[–] Seigest@lemmy.ca 6 points 4 months ago

Not my idea. But happy to spread it.

[–] Seigest@lemmy.ca 7 points 4 months ago

Good luck. Let us as a community know how we can help you.

[–] Seigest@lemmy.ca 16 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I was in elementary in Canada early 90's. My school was weird. There's a large Mennonite community in the area where I grew up so a large percentage (more than 50%) of the kids in this school were Mennonite. For those unfamiliar, these are similar to Amish. Such farmers with strong religious views, most of them were "old order" meaning they grew up in homes with little to no electricity. They also finish school at age 12 regardless of progress. This meant that they were exempt from a lot of the classes my tiny public school had to offer. No French, computing, or Sex Ed. A lot of them were also in special Ed. I'm not going to sugar coat this. It's forbidden from them to marry outside of their culture and only like 4 families came to the area. So there's a lot of disabilities as a result of inbreeding with that community.

All this to say that my school had absolutely no clue how to deal with my undiagnosed autism. But they seemed to have decent funding due to the much higher needs.

I was in special Ed via French exemption status. This means I never learned french. I'd instead be placed in a room with all the Mennonite kids often in a corner trying to read. Eventually I was put into some kind of program. A neurologist should come by and do experiments on me. Nothing weird, just testing my fine motor skills. They (falsely) diagnosed me with "elementary tremors" a pediatric doctor upped this to a "retardation caused by mild down syndrome" (extremely wrong) after years of that nonsense they decided to use this crazy new fangled technology to give me a leg up with writing. I was given a Macintosh computer. I had a desk with tiny wheels and my 4th grade self had to wheel this from class to class (including "portables"). Of course this was pretty obsolete tech even for its time. My parents got me an Alpha Smart which was way better. By 6th grade I had a personal support worker to help get me caught up. I failed grades 3-6 but was 'placed' into the next grade anyway and never made to repeat anything.

Highschool was very different, no Mennonite, so way less funding. It was still a French exemption class but there were only about 5 other students in the class. It seemed to be less about education, or assessment of my condition. It was some watching videos and doing some analysis. It was mostly just a time to catch up on homework. Often there wasn't even a teacher present.

[–] Seigest@lemmy.ca 6 points 4 months ago

They do corrections videos annually. But yes as with all fact, documentary, history, science and other educational videos it's good to get other sources. In the cases of these logistics based videos it's pretty easy to get all this data as the details would be meticulously documented and most places are open about that data.

[–] Seigest@lemmy.ca 12 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (3 children)

https://youtu.be/aBa82NCdLoc a half as interesting video on this topic

[–] Seigest@lemmy.ca 3 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I've slowly been doing a reread with this its working pretty good for me.

[–] Seigest@lemmy.ca 14 points 4 months ago (3 children)

I miss the Mongolian grill

[–] Seigest@lemmy.ca 2 points 4 months ago

We really need a modern remake of this.

13
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by Seigest@lemmy.ca to c/askto@lemmy.ca
 

I've been using Bell since prior to moving here. Everywhere I ask suggest that have the best "coverage". They even have 3 towers near my location. but neither my roommate or I can get a decent signal in our condo. I often miss calls or experience disconnects.

This is also true when out doing errands such as buying groceries. I usually send pictures to my roommate to confirm what I need to buy. But often need find specific places in the stores that have signal.

Does anyone else have this issue? also is there any provider which doesn't have this issue?

Solution

There was a wifi calling option on my phone. I was confused by the websites which made it sound like somthing that cost extra. Turns out you just need to provide an adress for 911 use then it just sorta works.

 

Here's an odd cautionary tale.

The other day I got a call. The usual fraud robot caller saying somthing about a $600 dollar charge. I hang up on it as is normal.

However, I'm a bit paranoid when it comes to money. I've had money taken from me more times then I'd like to admit. So I check anyway.

Obviously there's no random $600 charges on there and the robo caller was just a scammer. But I do see something weird. A charge for $1 to a Vietnamese eatery up in North York (I'm not sure if I am allowed to name it).

I live downtown and hardly ever go to North York. Even more weird is that is was for $1. Nothing in any restaurant cost $1 not even the delivery fees. Again I am paranoid so I report and lock down the card. A massive inconvenience these days.

However, the bank has confirmed it was fraud, and they are changing up my card numbers.

Has this happened to anyone else? I have no idea how they got me.

One theory I have is that this was a probe. Simular to when you set up a PayPal account and they charge you $1 to verify your credit information is correct. But why whould an eatery do that?

Either that or scammers got a giant list of numbers and charged them $1 each hoping no one whould bother reporting it.

 

I got an email I had assumed was a scam but it's not asking me to click any links or do anything beyond contacting one if many law offices.

It just says there's a class action lawsuit against life labs regarding a data leak and that I've automatically been included.

Buy how did this legal group get my email? Is this how class action lawsuits work now I'm just tossed into them?

I suppose I could contact one if the lawyers the email mentions but did anyone else get this?

Update: spoke with a family member who also received this. They also have a lot of experience with these. His advice was to ignore it. If they win check back on how to claim a few bucks.

 

The "all new" feed is a bit of a mess regardless. Hundreds of porn links being posted on random@kbin.social. I can't tell if this is bots or some weird and intentionally random thing they are doing.

 

I'm going to horribly oversimply this. For example. Say I am wearing a shirt a cheap one for Wal-Mart.

This shirt was produced in a sweat shop. That sweat shop has .0005 deaths per day. Thus by wearing this shirt and supporting the mechanisms that brought it to me. I have a killcount for today a number substantially smaller then .0005 and obviously there's a tonne of subjectivity on what that number might be.

Now include the dye factory that made the shirt green, the shoes I am wearing, the bus I am riding in, the coffee I drink. All these luxuries and that number may go up a little.

I am wondering if this is somthing that is being considered anywhere is somone building a calculation to determine our daily kill counts.

I'm sure most of us probably don't what to know what ours might be, but knowing what parts of our daily lives have the highest values we might work harder to change for the better.

 

It's been closed due to "unforseen circumstances" for a few weeks now according to the notes on the door.

Anyone know the story there and when it may open up again?

Resolved

It opened back up after like 3 months. No idea what closed it

 

Im downtown is this fog, smog or smoke?

 

I noticed there's a lot of " This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot." Post. And I am wondering why?

I dont really understand why these are popular. The bots are only copying the OP Post and not the comments.

-26
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by Seigest@lemmy.ca to c/rimworld@lemmy.world
 

for the sake of keeping things active in our new home here on Lemmy let's share bases. I get a lot of good idea from seeing what others are doing.

https://imgur.com/1JcBOde

3
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by Seigest@lemmy.ca to c/askto@lemmy.ca
 

Brining back one of the most asked questions from the sub reddit.

I am downtown core area.

The only one I am seeing is the care& family health way out in Yorkville. And the want $300 annually.

I hate the idea but almost desperate enough to pay it.

Solved

Found one near downtown. They had a broken website so they somehow didn't get noticed. Grace medical.

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