Give us the cheat codes to your industry/place of work!

  • cr0n1c@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    You can freeze chips/crisps indefinitely. I used to work for Frito Lay. Just thaw them when you get close to snack time. Of course I never do this because I just eat the chips I have at home.

      • PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        I mean, if they’re bagged in a low humidity environment and the bag stays sealed, there should be very little chance of them getting soggy. Because in order for them to get soggy, the bag would need humidity.

      • cr0n1c@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        I only interned there, but the handful of times I thawed the chips, there were no issues.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      6 months ago

      My instant thought was that that’s amazing, my next thought was along the lines of how badly that would murder freezer space unless you open the bag. Can I open the bag?

      • cr0n1c@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Never tried, but I think it would work. Oxygen is the enemy, but the reason is because oxidation leads to other byproducts that lead to a stale flavor. I believe the cold temperature slows all that down.

  • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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    6 months ago

    I have to do project management in my industry.

    Make the big decisions first and focus on pain points/fatal flaws with stakeholders and subject matter experts. I’ve seen cases where projects go through several redesigns because the PM focused on easy design tasks first, then it turned out a later design task caused the early design tasks to need to be redone.

    Ask people why certain decisions are being made. Keep these discussions one on one. You can often tell by the quality of the answer how good the reasoning is.

    • charles@lemmy.ca
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      6 months ago

      I’m one of the few that don’t work in tech but it’s arguably the hobby I spend the most time (and money) with so I’m not sure if I really count. I work in emergency management & specialized response services.

    • spicy pancake@lemmy.zip
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      6 months ago

      I’m currently in the medical field but “IT” is one of my nicknames 💀 every new place I work I try to hide it but I just impulsively fix shit and then end up being expected to fix shit

    • Miarolitic@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Geologist checking in.

      Although, I don’t know what LTP means in this context. In my world, it’s “Long Term Planning”.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      6 months ago

      The big populating event was Reddit shutting down API service (about a year ago, happy first cake day to me). Most people don’t know what that is. A lot of people don’t get what federation is, either.

      I fully hope and expect that normies will appear as it grows, but for now it’s people nerdy enough to know why we should care.

    • Rowan@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 months ago

      IT folks are exactly the people who will be early adoptors of technology. If lemmy can start growing to something approaching an early majority, then we’ll see a big shift in the demographic of the user base. Unfortunately, that’s a huge gap in expansion.

      • TheFriar@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        Well, I’m just an anti-capitalist non-tech person. I barely know anything about what most people seem to consider basic tech knowledge. Fuck that weird pedo ceo of Reddit, fuck that company, fuck corporate greed in general. I’m just here to avoid being forced to take ankther company’s vampiric bullshit.

  • Sheldybear@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    I’m in the museum sector.

    Never pick something up to move it until you’ve seen the place where you’re moving the thing and it’s clear of junk.

    It’s safer to make two trips instead of one. It’s safer to make three trips instead of two.

    The best thing you can do for something old that looks like it’s slowly falling apart is usually to leave it alone.

  • PancakeBrock@lemmy.zip
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    6 months ago

    I do concrete work. Every video you see of someone or something walking into super wet concrete it really doesn’t matter. That’s a 5 minute fix. Cars going into it though you have to figure out how to get the car out.

    • LowtierComputer@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I’m really surprised by that. The last guy I worked with made such a big deal about putting up temporary guards. I think he just wanted to get in another hour or so of work.

      • PancakeBrock@lemmy.zip
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        6 months ago

        Normally when you finish placing the concrete you always have extra in the truck. So we pour out a pile or fill up the wheel barrow with extra. So say a dog walks in it and the concrete is still really wet. You just grab some of the extra concrete with a shovel, toss it out into the holes, and run the bull float over it again. Concrete guys are really good at tossing something from a shovel and hitting their target haha.

        Barricades are nice to just stop people from doing it in the first place but unless you’re doing some solid barricades you always have someone who ignores them.

        When the concrete is pretty hard but still wet enough to leave tracks is when it’s more difficult to fix.

  • golden_zealot@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    From when I worked in IT:

    -In your ticket, do not give a vague description and a time you want the problem fixed and then expect anything to get fixed. Often times we very much need to work with you directly to understand your problem thoroughly to investigate and fix it thoroughly.

    -If you have some weird problem, it might be just as weird to us when we first look at it. We are not omniscient. What we are good at is researching possible fixes, applying them, and measuring the effect they have in actually solving your problem.

    -If we didn’t install it, don’t expect we know anything about it. You might really like to install and use Fusion 360 over AutoCAD or something, but that doesn’t mean I know where Fusion 360 is storing its configurations, or that I have a phone number to call to get support from that company as a vendor, or that I have ever troubleshot this application.

    -If you’re really nice to us, we might be able to offer you suggestions for problems on personal computers, but sorry, we cant usually touch it, especially if we are outsourced IT. The moment we touch your personal computer it opens us to a shitload of liabilities and it could lose me my job.

    -We understand very much that typically the only time you’re talking to us is when you’re mad because some shit is preventing you from working, but we don’t want that either so don’t be mad at us about it, we would prefer you never had to put in a ticket for anything except configuration change requests.

    -Pay attention to our recommendations. If we say you have to have your laptop on at a certain time of day weekly for updates, we aren’t just asking for our benefit, we’re asking this because if you ignore it, eventually when you power on your laptop, windows is going to force all those updates to push at once and suddenly you’ll be without your computer when you’re supposed to be doing an important presentation because its going to take 4 hours for a years worth of updates to apply. We have little control over this.

  • logging_strict@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    pirate: My dreams concern ccy off ramps. Remote work is our future.

    At all costs, never ever answer any kyc/aml questions:

    • What’s your name?
    • How old are you?
    • What country are you from?
    • Where do you live?
    • Can i have your phone number?

    The truth is vastly overrated concept.

    openssl rand -hex 20 <-- memorize this. Adjusting integer affects output length. Try it now. Now try is 20 times in a row. This is your name and password generator. My name is a71fe7b7ec46e0ae0a191004509af262cb2bbe99

    Outing your identity has HUGE financial and legal repercussions. Not outting your own identity saves on: stress, time, filling out forms, and you can keep your income and house (a motel is insurance). There will be fees to be paid to ccy off ramps, but they are nothing in comparison.

    If anyone insists, insist they give you their credit card. Then keep it. This is an important life lesson. Anyone can be de-systemed. And as soon as you internalize that … the better. If you are not de-systemed, consider yourself de-systemed. Plan accordingly. I know folks who are de-systemed.

    Make a telegram group for onboarding. Create invite links as needed. Then no need to exchange phone numbers. I’m ok with Russia viewing my communications. In fact, that’s hilarious. Could use e2e encryption. Boris is busy anyway.

    If you talk about coding always, you’ll become immune to censorship. Normies brains cannot withstand such punishment. They’ll find someone else to censor.

  • BOMBS@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Tertiary education: university professor.

    LPT: Talk to your professor and ask questions!!

    I have so many students that don’t perform well because they didn’t understand some material. I’m seriously getting paid to help you understand it, but I can’t present it in a way that works perfectly for every student since they all have their own learning styles. I also wont know if they aren’t getting it of no one speaks out.

    I want:

    • to help
    • everyone to learn the material
    • to talk about science because I’m a super nerd
    • what is and isn’t working for you in class
    • students to show up to office hours

    I don’t:

    • expect anyone to already know something they haven’t learned about
    • care if you ask me a million questions
    • want you to perform poorly
    • want you do go to the field unprepared
    • like it when students treat me like they are bothering me
    • grade papers that are ridiculously wrong because students didn’t try to ask me for help

    The vast majority of university professors are obsessed with what they teach, so much so, that they made a career out of talking about it. Asking then about it would make their day. If you go up to one that seems like they’re being bothered, then that’s the exception. Don’t let that one stop you from engaging with all of the others.

    Note: This is true for almost all courses. However, there are some courses in certain universities that are considered “weed out classes”. These classes, typically taken in the first 2 years, are informally designed to have lower performing students fail before they advance too far into the major and find out later that they don’t have what it takes to be successful in the field. The professors of those classes are more commonly not helpful at all. Don’t give me shit about it because I didn’t design this system nor do I teach those classes.

    • pingveno@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      Tertiary education: IT (software developer)

      Same theme for my LPT, different area. Are you having a problem? Housing? Tuition? Health issue? Ask about it! Likely you’re one of many and we (support staff) have systems in place to point you in the right direction. If you’re the first to run into a problem, we need to know so we can fix it. Don’t worry about bothering us, that’s what we’re there for. Many students wait until they have no other choice but to get in contact when it would have been easier for everyone if they had brought it up sooner. I totally understand the impulse, I’ve been that kid.

    • dizzy@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      I was going to say I had the polar opposite experience until your last paragraph.

      Lecturers were very rarely excited about the material they taught, left as soon as they could and were far more concerned with their research than helping students.

      That was EE so probably a mix of weed-out and the fact that they were all socially awkward mega nerds.

    • auzas_1337@lemmy.zip
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      6 months ago

      Thank you for putting all of this so succintly. I’m not into teaching, but I’ve done a few workshops and I always struggle to express the attitude you described to get the pupils engaged.

      I had this same attitude when I was a student. Even though my professors were older and more knowledgable, I always tried to approach them as peers and it worked out great. I’m not the sharpest tool in the shed, but because I talked, I could use my strengths better because I was more aware of the expectations and requirements than a portion of other students.

    • brygphilomena@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I completely agree.

      Back when I was taking GEs I had an ancient history class that I just couldn’t get. One visit to the professors office hours and he basically guaranteed me a decent passing grade as long as I did the final essay.

      His job was to teach and help students pass. He knew his subject wasn’t everyone’s passion and was super chill about it.

      One caveat of this, is in my experience it was younger TAs running 100 level classes that were the strictest. They for whatever reason didn’t have the experience or self-awareness to know that their teaching method didn’t align with every student.

      • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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        6 months ago

        You also have the viewpoint that some freshmen level classes were designed to specifically weed people out. If you aren’t able to have a way to pass those classes, then it was thought that teaching you further would be a waste.

        • brygphilomena@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Which is such a poor attitude. Just because someone is bad in one subject doesn’t apply to every subject. English, math, and history were all GEs. What use does having an English major be weeded out by their ability to do stats or calculus?

          Or a psych major because they have no particular interest in pre-silk road civilizations?

  • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    Software development here. Never, ever, connect your appliances to the internet, and check whether appliances you buy have an offline mode as some are now aggressively forcing users to connect in order to use them.

    • dizzy@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      What’s your reasoning for this?

      Anything better than using a vlan to separate these types of devices from the rest of the network?

      • invertedspear@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        They are programmed as cheaply as possible and manufactures don’t care once you buy a product so it’s just a matter of time before it becomes part of someone’s botnet, using your power and internet to harass some server somewhere.

      • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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        6 months ago

        As the other reply mentions, aside from these devices representing a security vulnerability, there have been numerous cases where the devices themselves got hijacked. In some cases they can even get bricked via updates. There’s also a privacy concern with these companies collecting data on how you use the device.

        • TheChargedCreeper864@lemmy.ml
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          6 months ago

          Does this also apply when not using the official app? I recently bought a Phillips bulb (not Hue) and set up Home Assistant for it, along with the Matter bridge. This turned out to also connect it to the Wi-Fi, but I never installed a manufacturer app.

          Would blocking internet access via parental controls on the router be enough to mitigate such threats, or is its mere presence in an internet-connected network dangerous?

          • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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            6 months ago

            The itself app isn’t typically the issue. It’s the remote server that the appliance and the app connect to that’s the problem. What happens is that the appliance uses your wifi to talk to the company server, and that server pushes updates to it, does tracking, and so on. As long as the appliance can’t connect to the internet there’s no danger from it. Typically, the best approach is to avoid configuring the connection in the first place.

  • nikita@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    Comstruction:

    If you want to build the best building you gotta know every detail about how it’s made, which you can only get close to by hiring competent consultants (i.e.: architects, engineers, etc) Because if you’re not specific about what you want, you can bet your ass you’re getting the cheapest version.

  • Chaotic Entropy@feddit.uk
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    6 months ago

    It’s okay to not start in your ideal job on day one and to take sideways shifts to get closer to it. I went from phone monkey in a call centre, to a letter monkey, to a software tester, to a software business analyst (all at the same company), to a software product owner, to a software product manager. I gravitated back towards my stronger IT oriented passions over time.

  • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    King of England. Please don’t visit the Palace, there’s literally nothing to see.

    If you’re going to see the show and spot me in a side booth, please don’t heckle. Yes she knows. Yes of course she knows. Yes he’s a prick. Yes your money is being wasted on us, but we’re all you’ve got in terms of benevolent rich people so live with it.

  • arxdat@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    I’m a philosopher, nothing matters, so stop worrying about it and live your life the way you want to live it.

  • Lenny@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Tech, specifically AI automation. My LPT is that most services are just using GPT4 in some capacity. Automated workflows are not plug and play, credentials expire, variables change, limits are exceeded, etc. Rather than pay a random company to build and maintain something for you, you can save a shit ton by just hiring someone in-house who knows Zapier or Make and having them build the workflow you need.

    • RedAggroBest@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      So I typed out a long reply with helpful tips and everything but Lemmy broke and I couldn’t send that, and I really can’t be arsed again, this is already too much effort.

      Massage/Wellness: your posture sucks and your back hurts all the time because you have a flabby gut and no ass. Get to exercising.

  • KISSmyOSFeddit@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Cybersecurity

    If you have anything worthwhile on your PC, you should really buy your own router instead of using the one provided by your ISP.

    • lattrommi@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      currently my only option for internet is by tethering my phone mobile data. i do it with a usb hotspot. i have a wifi router but it seems unnecessary, complicated and slower than usb, so it is not currently in use. it’s an android phone and a linux computer but i don’t feel i know enough about either device or networking in general. should i be worried or do things different? i don’t have much that’s important. i still fear i might be doing things wrong.

    • Maple Engineer@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I always have a firewall inside the ISP device. I also have segmented network with the devices I mostly control on one network and the devices that the manufacturer mostly controls on another.

      • Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        ISP security is clown shoes at times. I was reading a blog post of a dude who played with their ISP APIs and was able to make changes to his own router because authenticated API endpoints returned data unauthenticated multiple times because they could just send the same request multiple times until it returned data. They fixed it quick, but still …

        https://samcurry.net/hacking-millions-of-modems

        • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          6 months ago

          It’s fascinating how these guys think. There’s so much inferring what might have been done behind closed doors, and correctly.

          I’m also surprised that one of these threat-detection things people talk about wasn’t triggered when he was literally sending with “123456789” in most of the fields of a request.

          • Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            I’m also surprised that one of these threat-detection things people talk about wasn’t triggered when he was literally sending with “123456789” in most of the fields of a request.

            Considering their systems allowed data return just because they got asked repeatedly, I’m not surprised at all. You’d be surprised the seemingly important metrics that don’t get monitored and reported on during day to day operations.

    • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 months ago

      I’m actually looking for a router right now, do you have a particular one or few you’d recommend?

      I was thinking about going with one of the companies that preinstalls openwrt and trying to learn that, but idk much about openwrt just yet.

      • You999@sh.itjust.works
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        6 months ago

        Ubiquiti unifi: pretty preformant while being dead simple to set up. No licensing fees but upfront price is steep. If you really get into networking you will find their hardware and software stack limiting especially if you need speeds greater than 25 gigabit.

        Mikrotik: single handedly the best value out there. Their OSes can be confusing at times and you may need some CLI skills to do everything but it’s a good learning platform.

        Opensense: highly flexible where you can tailor your experience to exactly what you need. If you are the type of person who wants all of the bells and whistle along with fine granulated controls this is your option.

        Openwrt: a good choice if you already own a supported device but I personally wouldn’t go out and buy hardware for openwrt when opnsense is a better option.

        Cisco: there are two types of people who buy Cisco, those who are obtaining their CCNA and those who have their CCNA.

        tp-link omada: directly marketed as a ubiquiti unifi competitor but cheaper. Being a new line of products it’s not really time tested. I’ve heard very polarizing opinions on them so your milage may vary.

        meraki: Cisco’s other brand. Sometimes you can get their hardware for free because they make all of their money off of the licensing fees.