Looking for autism friendly color guide, boosts welcome
@c0debabe any chance you might remember where an autism-friendly color guide might be? @kasserole was talking about it earlier and it seemed like something you might've seen.
Possibly a longer take than desired
@ajroach42 that sounds really frustrating. It also sounds maybe like it's not just a 'trust' problem but also a humility/etc problem.
In a maybe less generous perspective, perhaps there was some arrogance / brashness in attempting the failed fix instead of asking for help or letting someone know.
In a kinder perspective, I could see how someone might have tried to change or fix something if they were nervous and could have felt like they needed to reach way beyond their expertise. Especially with the holiday coming up, maybe? I've ran into this attitude in factories-- something is wrong, I am a factory person, I will try to get the machine to stop alarming because it going wrong must somehow be my fault and if I don't fix it right now, it might look bad. Often, the method used to fix it is wrong, damages equipment, and makes the place less safe.
One of the things Cyberia makes sure to stress to our users is that we have zero uptime guarantees. We're all volunteer run, and if running things isn't fun, we'll just stop.
The folks with prints in the queue... Could well have ordered those prints out to a job shop if they desperately needed it by a certain time. Hypothetically. It's way less cool, but you're just not a multimillion dollar corporation whose goal is to crank out prints. It's cool when you can show them up, but makerspaces offer way more to their communities than just a factory would. Maybe stress that it's OK to not be a factory a little more? IMO, best effort is usually pretty good vibes.
If you don't have it, a rotation policy might be helpful. Like, 'if something goes weird on your watch, your job is different for a week or so while some fresh eyes take a look'? That way, if someone is uncomfortable or scared or not confident enough, maybe they can do things that are a bit less challenging for a bit and feel a little more secure and valued. Plus, it's a clear consequence, but doesn't necessarily feel like a punishment. Just a thought!
Also, lastly, I wonder if your spaghetti issue might be an airflow issue. If there's a way to control for that (maybe put it in a box and see if it improves?) it might be a simple test. Especially if the spaghetti is directional.
Best of luck down there! 💙
covid, putting on my dad hat, risk assessment
Judging by what I'm reading about hospital capacity, and from the local EMT friends my roommate knows, now would really be a good time to practice IRL risk assessment.
Everyone's already made up their minds about covid risk levels and balances, so I won't harass except to say Get Your Boosters Please.
But also:
Cook and clean carefully.
Watch the state of the leftovers you eat.
Don't do anything stupid with electricity, wires, or your space heater.
Consider postponing repairs and projects that need power tools, if you can.
Stay off interstate highways as much as possible.
Watch. Out. For. Ice.
People are already sitting in ERs for *days* at this point. This won't last forever, but it might be a good idea to live like you're made of breakable materials for a few weeks. Because you are. 💜
I'm proud of what cyberia.club has done with capsul.org, our home-grown "cloud" VPS provider over the past couple of years. We keep it running day in and day out, and others have joined us in our repos / made a fork, embarking on their own journey.
https://sequentialread.com/capsul-rumors-my-demise-greatly-exaggerated/
@loveisanalogue very cool! Do you have the sheet music for this somewhere? Are covers okay?
Please caption your images, describe what's in the links you're sending people toward, describe the videos you're sharing, make sure you use words on your posts that verbally describe their contents so people's filters work on them. If you can't do that consistently, consider switching to unlisted posting by default or ask for help. For image descriptions, "caption please" in a post will nearly always inspire a reply or two with help allowing screen reader users to enjoy your posts.
We do have people who need such accommodations on this instance; please use the tools (built-in or social) provided.
Want to work as a SRE (full remote) for the Tor Project?
https://www.fossjobs.net/job/10775/onion-services-sre-at-the-tor-project/
@FirstProgenitor I suspect there may also be a "what is she's not a cis woman?" thing going on.
Before I realized I was nonbinary, I preferred dating people who liked men because, for some reason, I felt more 'seen'. For some mysterious reason that I couldn't figure out. I wonder what that might have been. :P
There's also maybe some toxic privilege stuff happening, or whatever else.
But like, for a lot of people, especially if they look like conventionally attractive young women, the scale on "should I do something about Gender Thing?" is tipped a bit towards "wait a few years until you're too old to easily do Hot Girl Shit, and then check back", IMO.
i like kind machines. pro-people-not-dying. anti-nazi. anti-colonizer. pagan, but lazy about it.
I am #HardOfHearing, #nonbinary, polyamourous, into ttrpgs and #tech. Hobbyist #leatherworker, hobbyist scifi author, community builder, and artist.
I like to build #whimsical things that help people to #dream better and form meaningful connections. If you wanna hang out with friendly computer weirdos in Minneapolis, lemme know.
Profile image description: a watercolor painting of a person with pale skin and brown and blue hair laughing. They have a side cut and an audio processor is visible behind their ear. The art style is loose and the eyes are squinched into little crescents.