The inside of your 5yo or older waterlines is one of the dirtiest and nastiest things you will ever see in all your life. You may become a conspiracy theorist if you do see them. "What else is terribly dirty and bad for me that is put in food, health products, etc, that I'm told is perfectly fine?" The city water is not okay unfiltered.
I just create a password and then change the last character when they request a password change. I do write it down because you have to change it so often. I don’t keep it where people could find it, though. Oh, and ours doesn’t have restrictions like no double letters. I believe the requirements are at least 8 characters, one number or special character and one capital letter. 4:00
I work in IT security. Pretty exciting but sometimes kinda thankless field. Because if everything works, someone is going to ask „Everything works, what are we even paying you for?“ But when SHTF, it suddenly switches to „Nothing is working! What are we even paying you for?!“ Nobody notices security when it works. But when it doesn’t, everyone immediately knows. That said: All of us have been telling people basically the same fricking things for well over 3 decades. There are some minor variations but on the whole, the same things that were relevant 30 years ago remain relevant today. And yet, we have to maintain a „Told you so“ folder just in case management gets in our face about some screwup that would not have happened if they had followed recommendations that we first gave 2 years ago and last gave 6 months ago. And that they rejected each and every time.
Here’s one from the library profession: We throw out a fair bit of old material. It’s called “weeding” and people freak out when they find out about it because they think books are super precious. But a lot of the time it’s outdated material (stuff in the science, medical and law fields can get outdated quick). Or it’s damaged material. Or it’s stuff that doesn’t circulate. If a book hasn’t circulated in years, no one’s using it and it’s useless shelf-filler. I know what I’m talking about. I have a Masters degree in this stuff (another little known fact: most good libraries require librarians to have a Masters in Library and Information Science).
Up to 60% of people have gum disease and don’t even know it. It does not hurt and affect the bone under the gum tissues. There are also a lot of dental practices that do not perform the standard assessments to diagnose the disease.
I work in shipping and I can tell you that so many people unnecessarily label packages as "fragile" that the word has lost all meaning. When you encounter yet another 80lb box that is so dense that not even a point-blank shotgun blast could damage it, you just learn to ignore the fragile notice. The labels that people actually notice are "glass" and any kind of hazardous material notification.
Well that makes a lot of sense, my mom got in a car wreck 32 years ago when I was 8 that's why I'm so anxious about driving. Seeing what making one mistake can do to you really messed me up I guess, hell you can make no mistakes and still get destroyed. Giant machines that weigh thousands of pounds being driven by people who will sacrifice their entire existence to sit at a red light for 30 seconds, it's terrifying lol.
The reason for changing passwords constantly is so that brute forcing, (letting a computer try every possible passwords through a many accounts as necessary) takes longer to the point of it being not worth it. It increases security. No one is breaking into offices looking for sticky notes anymore. If they were, Watergate would still be relevant
The Heath Inspectors of your favorite restaurants will ignore major infractions, just write up minor stuff…. They are very underpaid, and just want to do their job, and not be the person who destroys people’s lives by closing the restaurant down!….
If McDonalds says their ice cream machine is down more than likely someone is cleaning it but if we tell you were cleaning it yall will rush us for a lil cone so its “broken”. This is preferred trust me bc we once had an incident with an older worker being yelled at to hurry up and clean the machine so that a customer’s kid can get an ice cream. The poor old lady was so nervous she forgot the cleaning brush was inside the machine…we served ice cream for a whole week before anyone realized. 😬
13:06 I'm gamer, if some game doesn't start first thing I try is restart computer, always works. only in 2 cases I had to download a pirated version because the game had new anti-steam protection.
Rè lift story at 2 minutes in. You have obviously never been an underground miner with shafts. They have a dead mans claw that activates with huge spring automatically when the cable breaks. They do from time to time, the claw activates and the lift stops. Violently. And the miners live. These do of course need testing and servicing from time to time. A small mine neglected to do this near Broken Hill. The cable broke and the claw failed to activate. The miners died. Way less than 600m, about 200m in fact (but Broken Hill did have shafts up to 3,200m in depth). And just fyi, anything over 6m is death zone territory
Boeing might disagree with the plans being the safest method of travel considering they just murdered the guy testifing against them for safety issues.
The inside of your 5yo or older waterlines is one of the dirtiest and nastiest things you will ever see in all your life. You may become a conspiracy theorist if you do see them. "What else is terribly dirty and bad for me that is put in food, health products, etc, that I'm told is perfectly fine?" The city water is not okay unfiltered.
I just create a password and then change the last character when they request a password change. I do write it down because you have to change it so often. I don’t keep it where people could find it, though. Oh, and ours doesn’t have restrictions like no double letters. I believe the requirements are at least 8 characters, one number or special character and one capital letter. 4:00
I work in IT security. Pretty exciting but sometimes kinda thankless field. Because if everything works, someone is going to ask „Everything works, what are we even paying you for?“ But when SHTF, it suddenly switches to „Nothing is working! What are we even paying you for?!“
Nobody notices security when it works. But when it doesn’t, everyone immediately knows.
That said: All of us have been telling people basically the same fricking things for well over 3 decades. There are some minor variations but on the whole, the same things that were relevant 30 years ago remain relevant today. And yet, we have to maintain a „Told you so“ folder just in case management gets in our face about some screwup that would not have happened if they had followed recommendations that we first gave 2 years ago and last gave 6 months ago. And that they rejected each and every time.
4:35 legit just helped me have a breakthrough. Thank you
7:08 The good ol' Rainbow Root, always fun when the new guy hits it🎉😂
Here’s one from the library profession: We throw
out a fair bit of old material. It’s called “weeding” and people freak out when they find out about it because they think books are super precious. But a lot of the time it’s outdated material (stuff in the science, medical and law fields can get outdated quick). Or it’s damaged material. Or it’s stuff that doesn’t circulate. If a book hasn’t circulated in years, no one’s using it and it’s useless shelf-filler.
I know what I’m talking about. I have a Masters degree in this stuff (another little known fact: most good libraries require librarians to have a Masters in Library and Information Science).
Go phish
Up to 60% of people have gum disease and don’t even know it. It does not hurt and affect the bone under the gum tissues. There are also a lot of dental practices that do not perform the standard assessments to diagnose the disease.
I work in shipping and I can tell you that so many people unnecessarily label packages as "fragile" that the word has lost all meaning. When you encounter yet another 80lb box that is so dense that not even a point-blank shotgun blast could damage it, you just learn to ignore the fragile notice. The labels that people actually notice are "glass" and any kind of hazardous material notification.
Well that makes a lot of sense, my mom got in a car wreck 32 years ago when I was 8 that's why I'm so anxious about driving. Seeing what making one mistake can do to you really messed me up I guess, hell you can make no mistakes and still get destroyed. Giant machines that weigh thousands of pounds being driven by people who will sacrifice their entire existence to sit at a red light for 30 seconds, it's terrifying lol.
The reason for changing passwords constantly is so that brute forcing, (letting a computer try every possible passwords through a many accounts as necessary) takes longer to the point of it being not worth it. It increases security. No one is breaking into offices looking for sticky notes anymore. If they were, Watergate would still be relevant
The Heath Inspectors of your favorite restaurants will ignore major infractions, just write up minor stuff…. They are very underpaid, and just want to do their job, and not be the person who destroys people’s lives by closing the restaurant down!….
If McDonalds says their ice cream machine is down more than likely someone is cleaning it but if we tell you were cleaning it yall will rush us for a lil cone so its “broken”. This is preferred trust me bc we once had an incident with an older worker being yelled at to hurry up and clean the machine so that a customer’s kid can get an ice cream. The poor old lady was so nervous she forgot the cleaning brush was inside the machine…we served ice cream for a whole week before anyone realized. 😬
never eating another ice cream there thanks 🤢
There is a story about a cursed piece of gold, it’s disbursed throughout “American dad”
13:06 I'm gamer, if some game doesn't start first thing I try is restart computer, always works. only in 2 cases I had to download a pirated version because the game had new anti-steam protection.
Rè lift story at 2 minutes in. You have obviously never been an underground miner with shafts. They have a dead mans claw that activates with huge spring automatically when the cable breaks. They do from time to time, the claw activates and the lift stops. Violently. And the miners live.
These do of course need testing and servicing from time to time. A small mine neglected to do this near Broken Hill. The cable broke and the claw failed to activate. The miners died. Way less than 600m, about 200m in fact (but Broken Hill did have shafts up to 3,200m in depth). And just fyi, anything over 6m is death zone territory
13:50 So the Golden poop saga form American dad?
Boeing might disagree with the plans being the safest method of travel considering they just murdered the guy testifing against them for safety issues.
Well this isnt a secret but those in the medical field when were using a stethoscope we cannot hear you so please stop talking lol
I didn’t realize that. When they do check. I stay quite so they can hear my body, though.
It hurts to hear someone talk while having a stethoscope on their upper body
Speed reading - Booooooo
First!