reminder: if you want an ebooks bot but don't wanna host it yourself, you can pledge the $2.50 tier on my patreon and i'll do it for you! you'll be able to set things like posting frequency (even to weird stuff like once a day or every 12 minutes), content warnings, accounts it should follow, and more!!
Did a little clean up on the graph showing roasting plans for a class I've been teaching lately. Temperatures are based on what they'd be on my machines locally and should probably be removed because it's the timing of event milestones that's important here and those are going to happen at different temperatures on different machines with different probes in different places. It's cooler in interactive form.
The nice thing about GNU/Linux is when stuff like this happens I at least have a clue where to start with fixing it and it's still possible to do a lot with a handful of virtual terminals.
X isn't working and Wayland gives about a minute before the fans all kick up to maximum and then everything hard powers down. Alt+Ctrl+F* to a text console works fine so I guess I'm fixing this from there.
Should my coffee roasters get fediverse bot accounts? Someone suggested that we should post what we roasted that day and my thoughts are:
1. Isn't there enough spam in the universe already?
2. The oldest stuff in my shop is still fresher than what you'll get elsewhere locally and if too many people are buying out of order it makes keeping things that way harder.
Did a coffee tasting with the latest hire. What I like to do for a first formal tasting is similar roast levels of an African coffee, an American coffee, a coffee from somewhere in the Pacific, and then the same coffee as one of those taken to a darker roast. Future tastings can build on that experience, but the idea is to give people a basic framework for thinking about how coffees taste and get some of the key vocabulary with a sensory experience.
Author of Typica software for coffee roasters.