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Alternately, if you're not going involve the health department early on so they can help you make it work, don't go to them at all and hope that nobody notices. Getting on their radar when there's no way you can possibly satisfy them is a bad idea.

Feel kind of sad for this guy who just came in. He's planning an event but waited way too long to run the food related parts of those plans past the health department and now there's no way he's going to be able to get the right permits on such a short time table. He needed to be partnering with a licensed business a lot earlier so they could navigate getting the off site permit. Food safety is no joke.

Used the last of my rags in a box today. One box lasts a couple years how I use those.

I bought sheets so now I'm getting email trying to sell me sheets by NULL. How many sheets do you robots think I need?

The obnoxious thing is that I can see exactly where I need to change upstream code to fix this but know that the patch would not be accepted and I can't just replicate the buggy method with the fix in my own project because upstream uses private API that I'd rather not bring in.

Failed to fix a bug, but in doing so I found lots of bug tracker discussions rejecting patches to upstream introducing APIs that would have at least given me other workarounds to try. I was planning on getting rid of that dependency for 2.0 anyway so now I have another reason to do that. The down side: replacing this is going to be a ton of work.

I need coffee grinders to stop breaking. One of the ones that was just out for repair failed again today. It can power on for about 1 second before something in the electronics catches fire and trips the breaker. I might be able to fix that but I was counting on getting other work done.

3 boxes of tea arrived today. Also another 1000ish pounds of coffee.

My @chest_bot dragon brought back a baby dragon and I can't feed it to get a 2nd dragon because the command targets the not-baby dragon who isn't hungry so I've deposited both items with @ATM

Apparently it's a thing these days for young people to not delete voicemails they like so they can listen to them again later. If your phone has a headphone jack, you can get a male-male mini jack. Plug one end into the headphone jack on your phone, the other end into the microphone jack on your computer, and you can record that to a file (which you can even move back onto your phone if you really want to). Then you can delete the voicemail so you can get new messages you might like even more.

If you put your phone number on your resume, maybe set up your voicemail (alternately, make sure it isn't full) so people can leave you a message?

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