• Widdershins@lemmy.world
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    1 hour ago
    1. My car doesn’t have a cigarette lighter
    2. My fridge has food in it
    3. There is/isn’t a guy named Ivan at work
  • JeremyHuntQW12@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Accountants actually spend hardly any time doing tax work. And in most countries tax returns are automatic anyway, so no, AI isn’t going to destroy all the accountant jobs.

  • /home/pineapplelover@lemm.ee
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    9 hours ago

    I started IT thinking it was genuinely telling people to turn their computers off and on again. I feel that’s like a 1% though. Most of the times it’s actual issues. At my work some stuff is hardware, web, databases and I wasn’t expecting this when I first started.

    Thanks IT Crowd

    • Obi@sopuli.xyz
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      6 hours ago

      They have a good gig in that show, tucked away in the basement, virtually no work to do, no deadlines, no kanban…

  • Bwaz@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Movies always show engineers and tech programmers as being young asocial nerds. We’re not all young.

  • vvilld@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    14 hours ago

    I’m an electrician who installs (mostly) commercial electrical systems, including fire alarm systems.

    In most cases, pulling a fire alarm pull station doesn’t set off the fire suppression sprinklers. The pull station just sets off the alarm and calls the Fire Department. Sprinklers aren’t automatically activated. The water in the sprinkler pipes is under constant pressure. Sprinkler heads are just nozzles with a little heat-activated stopper in them. When that stopper heats enough, it breaks and opens the nozzle, allowing water to flow (they can also be broken by fucking with them or hitting them with something). But there’s no mechanism that sets off other sprinkler heads when one goes off. Each head needs to be heat activated individually to go off. You see in movies and TV all the time someone pulling a pull station and that setting off sprinklers throughout the entire building, or someone lighting a fire in a small closet and that setting off sprinklers throughout the building. That simply isn’t how they work.

    (note: there are some fire suppression systems which do have remote activation, but those are not standard. They’re usually used somewhere like a data center or a lab where there’s extremely expensive stuff that you want to be sure doesn’t get damaged. And those systems usually use a fire suppression foam or powder, rather than water.)

    Also, the water in sprinkler pipes is NASTY. It’s been sitting in those pipes for years, sometimes decades. It gets black and sludgy pretty quickly. It stains/destroys anything it touches.

    • perviouslyiner@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      Deviant talked about a movie idea where setting off the sprinklers might actually be a better bet than fire call points when trying to escape a secure hospital in the US.

    • Deebster@infosec.pub
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      13 hours ago

      This reminds me of an episode of Taskmaster where a contestant plans to gain extra time by hitting the alarm in the lift (elevator) but instead of slamming to a halt there’s just a little voice message and the lift carries on as usual.

      • vvilld@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        11 hours ago

        Most accurate hacking sequences ever. Everyone knows that the most common file structures involve a 3D rendered cybercity.

        Also, it’s amazing that the most commonly used passwords are still God, Sex, Secret, and Love. Why would people use anything other than just a single word for a password?

    • Twitchy1@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      13 hours ago

      Came to make sure this was here… But man the panic when you find out the pull station DOES cause a deluge… All those pretty people getting soaked in that rainbow colored water, the smell.

  • Canopyflyer@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Hobby: Skydiving

    1. Free fall is at most 65 seconds on a normal jump. My personal record is jumping from 28,000 feet and I was in free fall for around 85 seconds. That’s it, there is no such thing as a 5 minute free fall, unless you are looking to break an altitude record.

    2. If you run up to a skydiver and pull their Pilot Chute (PC) out and throw it into the wind, nothing will happen. The gear is designed to work at free fall speeds. A 10mph wind will not pull the main out. If you pull on the PC bridle hard enough to actually pull the main out of its compartment… You will just have a main parachute in its deployment bag closed by rubber bands, or other method and it will just be laying on the ground. You will also get a well deserved punch in the mouth by more than one jumper. If you pull the reserve handle you will probably get murdered and there will be no witnesses, especially if the hanger was full of jumpers. They will just hide your body and you will have deserved your fate.

    3. BASE jumping and Skydiving are as related as Hockey and Figure Skating. Sure there is some overlap, but one cannot do the other without training. Also BASE is an acronym. Building, Antenna, Span, Earth. Bridges fall under Span BTW. No, I am not a BASE jumper, although I have jumped the Bridge in WV. So yeah, I guess I have my S.

    4. Yes, wing suites are cool. Wish I had more jumps on them.

    5. You cannot talk in free fall. The old movie trope of talking back and forth is simply not possible. How difficult is it to talk in a car with the windows open going down the road at 70mph? Now, remove the windshield and drive the car 120mph…

    6. The “parachute not opening” is not even in the top 10 concerns when jumping. The gear works and we jump with two chutes. There is a whole lot of bullshit that can happen before we get to deployment altitude. Not the least of which is just getting to the DZ in the morning. I always considered my drive to the DZ my most dangerous part of the day. Second most dangerous is being in the airplane. I’m actually relieved to exit the aircraft as at that point I have a better chance of making it to the ground safely than the pilot.

  • yarr@feddit.nl
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    15 hours ago

    Aside from Mr. Robot, almost every show that features software or computers completely butchers the details. My favorite offender? Mythic Quest. The main cast supposedly runs a massive MMORPG, yet their day-to-day activities have almost nothing to do with how game development or even basic software work actually functions.

    It is like if ER was about hospital staff moving random boxes labeled “coils” back and forth while claiming to perform life-saving surgery. That is how far off it feels.

    What really gets me is that Mr. Robot proved it is possible to do it right. If you treat the subject matter with respect, you can absolutely make something compelling and realistic. But since it is all just “nerd stuff” to most writers, and none of them are C++ goblins, we get tech scenes written by people who probably think JSON is a fitness drink.

    • BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      I’d give shows like Mythic Quest / Silicone Valley a pass, they are comedy shows so some creative liberty is expected

    • Obi@sopuli.xyz
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      6 hours ago

      Yeah I still enjoyed the show but it required some huge suspension of disbelief, and I never even worked in game dev, just with what I know as an outsider…

      • yarr@feddit.nl
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        8 hours ago

        No, that one was actually pretty spot on. My uncle works at Nintendo and he told me it’s pretty similar there.

    • ZeffSyde@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      I like how the QA department for Mythic Quest is always just two people. A game as supposedly huge as MQ would need way more (unless they mentioned outsourcing QA and I never caught it).

  • JandroDelSol@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    I work at a bank. Every bank heist scene makes me fucking cringe lmao. Why would only one person know the code to something??? Why are safety deposit boxes treated as some super special thing? Daredevil just pissed me off with this so much lol

  • stelelor@lemmy.ca
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    17 hours ago

    Hobby: Telescopes upside-down or back-to-front, pointed through windows, with aperture caps on, without eyepieces, under heavy light pollution and glare, magically show Hubble-level images of something only visible from the opposite hemisphere.

    Job: The Government knows everything about you and any employee can pull up any info on anyone in seconds. Ffs we can’t even get two departments to cooperate on a common database format.

    • crapwittyname@lemm.ee
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      8 hours ago

      Also the images they show are only possible with a camera and a slow shutter and image processing; what you see through the eyepiece is completely different and usually just a bluish smudge.

    • graff@lemm.ee
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      17 hours ago

      The Government knows everything about you and any employee can pull up any info on anyone in seconds

      DOGE is working on that

  • dream_weasel@sh.itjust.works
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    16 hours ago

    Hobby 1: Ballroom dancing

    It is surprisingly difficult to get into a good dance position, especially for the standard (waltz, tango, foxtrot, quickstep, Viennese waltz) dances. Two actors walk up to each other and it’s apparent even before they touch that they have no idea WTF they are doing: they aren’t even standing up correctly.

    Hobby 2: Chess

    Smart guy walks over and absolutely beats the pants off of anyone else playing like 30 seconds after they get taught the rules or from glancing over the shoulder of someone else playing the game. It’s all “aha! Mate in 4!”.

    No way dude. It is way, way not that easy. There’s “good at chess” and there’s “GOOD at chess”. Unless you are part of a very large club or are taking lessons from someone at or above the master level, you probably don’t know anybody in the second category. Dr. House is not going to blindfold beat anyone like that.

  • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    I used to work in organ transplants, and like literally everything related to organ transplants in film or tv is entirely wrong. Every medical drama, even the ones that pride themselves on realism, always try to make transplants and donation more dramatic, which is absurd when you consider how dramatic the reality actually is.

    • LavaPlanet@lemm.ee
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      17 hours ago

      Oooh. I love medical dramas, I seem to love to ruin them for myself by finding out what’s real and what’s not. That said I desperately want to know the details behind a real organ transplant, now that you’ve mentioned it in that way. Are you able to elaborate?

      • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        Sure, I can share non-confidential stuff of course.

        Like one thing tv and movies always get wrong is how much information is shared about who gets what. Donor families wait years to send or receive anonymous communications through the org, because both parties need to approve even the anonymous letters. If both sides are interested after a few more years, they might be able to eventually meet. I don’t remember the recommended waiting periods off the top of my head, but it was exceptionally rare for donor families to ever meet a recipient.

        Another thing everyone gets wrong is who is in charge of care and when. You’d never have the same doctor treating the patient, declaring them brain dead, and then recovering and transplanting the organs. I understand tv shows can’t have hundreds of actors, but any hospital will have a team of dedicated transplant surgeons, and there will be dozens of transplant hospitals involved in the organ allocation. Having one small group of people involved in both the care and the transplant is like having the farmer who grows corn also be the grocer who sells it, the chef who cooks it, and the busser who takes away your dishes. Those people barely communicate if they even know each other at all. They certainly aren’t getting involved in each of the others’ jobs.

        Unfortunately that one spills into the real world. People will say “don’t put Organ Donor on your license, or they won’t try to save you.” If you just think about that for even a moment, you realize how absurd it is.

        There’s plenty more, but those are the ones that tend to pop up every time.

        • medgremlin@midwest.social
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          10 hours ago

          From the emergency medicine perspective on that last bit…we don’t care if you have a DNR somewhere on file. If you show up in cardiac arrest and someone isn’t shoving an official POLST into our hands, we’re running the code. We’d rather someone try (and fail) to sue for malpractice for saving them than accidentally let someone die that didn’t want to.

          • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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            7 hours ago

            Exactly, and that’s your job. Like, people who think that doctors will murder them for organs also work at a job where they won’t hold the elevator for anyone pushing a mail cart. How long would you keep a job where you intentionally suck at it to help someone else do their job?

  • GoofSchmoofer@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    it’s neither a hobby or a job But the trope that a very complicated, very dangerous situation can be solved by just one person and a gun.

    It’s unfortunately so ingrained into the Hollywood story lines that people, especially in the US, think that that’s reality.

    The idea of the rugged individual has destroyed the idea of societal support to the point that some people are actually terrified to ask for help in anyway.