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100% agree! I built Paisley (because it is the opposite of plaid), to host your personal finances locally and is 100% open source. Paisley pulls data from your financial institutions by scraping balances and importing CSV exports, storing everything locally in a simple SQLite database.

https://github.com/patrickcollins12/paisley


You could summarize that data using some form of machine learning. A good new skill to develop. Then you don’t need to share the exact details, just a count per category. E.g. personal incident (32), late take off duty to X (23), passenger medical incident (15). Hopefully in aggregate form that data is less of a privacy issue and less of a commercial risk for your company.


Am I the only one who found this article a rambling mess? The first page makes a point, then it diverts off into a ridiculous rant.


This project describes how to build a quiet $20 PID-controlled thermostat controlled fan for cooling your media console or gaming cupboard.

The software is ESPHome and Home Assistant. The hardware is an ESP32 with a regular 12v 120mm Computer Fan (PWM) and a simple Temperature Sensor (DHT11).


Just bloody shootin for bronze… lookin for a Steven Bradbury.


With a $10 18650 rechargeable battery you could probably get a couple months on a single charge. Esphome can deep sleep between readouts: https://esphome.io/components/deep_sleep.html Deep sleep pulls the power draw down to 50uA.

Of course if you also wire a solar charger next to the battery… maybe it will never run out.


Seems like it worked for them.


Yep, attracting a reputation as a shop with a joke of an interview process seems like a good achievement to strive for...


Thanks Drew Houston, CEO of Dropbox!


Check your video card chipset and call support :P


Except when they're actively expounding upon and peddling bad news to ensure the stock price drops at the right time. That is what Musk is most frustrated by.

In my mind, all negative news about Tesla is now called into doubt as being news peddled by shorts. This is the challenge of declining journalism standards: all news now has someone with a vested interest behind it.


I havr to disagree here. Considering all the real trouble Tesla is currently in, not to mention Musk himself, and with otger car makers catching up electrical vehicles there is undeniably some doubt about Tesla as a company. On top that you have shaky financials and the departure of important executives, also in financial department. So yes, just looking at that without any hard number crunching and financial analysis the picture is not rousy.

All of which is sad, Tesla really had and still has some appeal to it. I don't think that appeal in itself is enough for a public company.

And by the way, not all negative reporting is automatically bad journalism or even fake news.


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