u/Dry-Yam322

▲ 7 r/djiosmo+1 crossposts

I keep seeing dual lens being brought up for the next wave of pocket cam and i don't know how I feel about it.

On paper it sounds cool, but for the way most people use these cameras, I wonder if it actually changes much.

For me the stuff that matters more is

good stabilization

low light that doesnt fall apart

fast startup

good audio options

not overheating

easy vertical video

a screen that doesnt feel fragile

I get why dual lens sounds more exciting, but if the main camera still struggles at night or the app is annoying, I dont think a second lens saves it.

Maybe Muse 2 Pro, Pocket 4 Pro, and Luna will prove me wrong, but I feel like real footage matters way more than the headline feature here.

Would you pay extra for dual lens or rather have better basics?

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u/Dry-Yam322 — 14 days ago

I was the only daughter of my mom, and I always thought I would be there for her no matter what. But life didn’t turn out that simple. I’m married, working full time, and also have a 6 year old kid to take care of. There were so many responsibilities at once, and I felt like I was being pulled in every direction. Because of all this, I couldn’t take care of my mom the way I truly wanted to.

At one point, I had to make the decision to move her into a care facility. It was one of the hardest decisions of my life, but I felt like I had no other option at that time. Now she’s no more… and the guilt is constantly there. I keep thinking I should have done more, I should have been there more. I wish I could go back and take care of her myself.

Ik I should move forward, especially for my child, but I feel stuck. It feels like I’m losing myself day by day, and I don’t really have anyone to talk to about this. My question is how do you keep yourself in check? I don’t even feel like doing anything anymore. Should I go to therapy, and does it actually help? If yes, I would really appreciate any suggestions, especially for online options.

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u/Dry-Yam322 — 17 days ago
▲ 21 r/agile

About platform engineering setups, the platform itself becomes what needs the most support. You are supposed to build internal tooling to improve infrastructure handling for product teams, not spending the majority of your time keeping that tooling running, figuring out how it works, and updating it when underlying dependencies get messed.

The promise is self service, not making the work harder. Yet for most setups all I'm seeing is that the tickets start piling up massively.

We are just 4 people supporting 60 engineers. Right now all we do is 60% maintenance and support, 40% building new capabilities. And that ratio hasn't changed a bit ever since we adopted the platform setup, every new capability creates new support tickets.

The only teams I've seen that this kind of stuff works reduced the number of steps a product team has to take to get something to production by removing steps entirely. The simpler and more intuitive the platform is, the less tickets we would get, I hope I can convince them to switch.

I'm interested in other teams experiences, do you have the same issues?

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u/Dry-Yam322 — 19 days ago

seeing a trend where individual model updates are feeling incremental but putting them in an ensemble setup makes huge jumps in reliability.

been testing platforms like asknestr.com that force top-tier models to critique each other and it feels like the synthesizer layer is where the real value is at now. catching confident hallucinations by making models argue is way more effective than zero-shot prompting a single model. anyone else pivoting to this

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u/Dry-Yam322 — 21 days ago

I saw this comparison floating around earlier, but honestly it made me think less about specs and more about availability.

I’ve been seeing some mixed info about Pocket 4 pro in the U.S. — not sure what’s actually going on there, but it doesn’t feel as straightforward as previous releases.

At the same time, MUSE 2 is starting to show up, and it looks like it’s aiming for a similar space spec-wise. If that ends up being easier to get in the U.S., that could actually matter more than small differences on paper.

Feels like we’re at a point where everything’s pretty close in terms of hardware anyway — 1" sensors, similar DR, slow mo, log, etc. So it almost comes down to what you can actually buy and use.

Anyone else feeling this or just overthinking it?

u/Dry-Yam322 — 21 days ago

I want to add a forecasting layer to our retail app. 8ration has some work in predictive AI that looks relevant. Is it easier to build this as a microservice or integrate it directly into the core app

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u/Dry-Yam322 — 22 days ago

I was looking up at my roof today and realized it's been way too long since I had a sweep out. We use the fireplace maybe 10-15 times a winter (I'm in the DFW area). I've heard horror stories about creosote fires but I don't know if I'm being paranoid or if I need to get someone out here ASAP before we light it again. Any local Dallas folks have a ""regular"" guy they trust for this that won't overcharge?

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u/Dry-Yam322 — 22 days ago

I’m planning to speak with a few immigration lawyers but not sure what I should actually be asking during consultations. For those who’ve done this before, what questions helped you decide?

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u/Dry-Yam322 — 28 days ago