@Nexuist Downsides:
- Adjusting back
- You miss stuff sometimes because you have to sleep during normal people hours
- Frustrating lack of open places at 3am when I’d want lunch or whatever
- Seriously though your circadian rhythms get very messed up for a long time afterward
@Nexuist Mostly society is just not set up for that lifestyle so once I had to integrate more with society (9-5 job, dating, etc) it became unsustainable.
@Nexuist Job let me set my own hours and I didn’t have any meetings. I actually did 6x28hr days per week instead of 7x24hr for those 9 months. I’d sleep 12 hrs every “night”. Once I got used to it after about 6 weeks I really liked it, but I had jet-lag for like 6 months switching back =P
I spent some time reversing the Spotify (iOS) app a couple weeks back looking for signs of HiFi. Turns out the menu for it is just disabled. Enabling it doesn’t get you very far though; that error comes up after tapping “Yes” or when tapping the “Get the most out of HiFi” button.
@Jaywalker I see, two non-trivial options come to mind in that case:
- LD_PRELOAD to patch read() for stdin such that it will make a copy and save it to disk
- A service that monitors /proc/ for bash called in a pipeline and dumps the contents of the running script to disk from mem (gcore?)
@kiahshabka Haha while both things are called “electric blankets” they are not really the same thing :P Ours are like your standard fuzzy blanket from primark or whatever, but they have wires going through them that heat them up!
@kiahshabka I’ve got one now and I’m surprised at how long it lasts! For overnight my mom uses an electric heat pad to keep her feet warm. Electric blankets are popular too, although we put our electric blankets over us instead of under.
@kiahshabka Had never seen a hot water bottle in my life until I moved to the U.K. We have plug-in and microwaveable equivalent heat packs, though neither use water.