▲ 1 r/Govee

Defect strip lights? Turning off at >75% brightness.

I have some Govee strip lights I use under my desk, and if I set them to white, then the brightness above 75% they just straight up turn off and recycle power.

I'm not sure whats wrong exactly, it seems like they just are unable to reach max brightness without frying themselves.

Any ideas? They're the Govee RGBIC LED Strip Lights.

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u/RaymondDoerr — 1 day ago
▲ 8 r/police

A fun observation; Personality types of people on bodycam vs social media comments.

Hey all, I have been watching bodycam videos lately for fun, getting into the ones from guys like Midwest Safety, Code Blue Cam, Sgt. Curtis, etc.

One thing I noticed, first of all, is how absolutely non-compliant people are for literally no reason what so ever. The amount of people who talk a brake light out casual "Just letting you know" warning into a full ass felony for assaulting an officer, and drug charges for the following "Illegal!!1!" car search is absolutely astounding.

What is more astounding though is how people on reddit defend these people acting this way, even the ones where the video does indeed show the full context of the guy being a complete non-compliant jackass and ending up with like 2 or 3 felonies for no reason. But "All cops are <blank>, because reasons. The cop just should have <insert 10,000 things that put him and others in danger>" and "If the cop would have just let him talk and give him a chance to comply, this would not have happened!!" completely ignoring the fact the guy was literally telling the cops to fuck off talking non-stop, not letting them say anything, and visibly trying to leave while being detained.

It got me thinking, are the bombastically rude, hateful comments from people online literally just be the same people (personality types*) of the people we see on bodycams?

Is that why these internet types are so insanely anti-cop, because the sad truth is a majority of these anticop people online are just the same personality types and they're just not capable of seeing the bad behavior as bad, and as a result, their loud, bombastically obnoxious attitudes are over represented online because, like in the bodycam, they just can't f'n shut up.

reddit.com
u/RaymondDoerr — 1 day ago

A fun observation; Personality types of people on bodycam vs social media comments.

Hey all, I have been watching bodycam videos lately for fun, getting into the ones from guys like Midwest Safety, Code Blue Cam, Sgt. Curtis, etc.

One thing I noticed, first of all, is how absolutely non-compliant people are for literally no reason what so ever. The amount of people who talk a brake light out casual "Just letting you know" warning into a full ass felony for assaulting an officer, and drug charges for the following "Illegal!!1!" car search is absolutely astounding.

What is more astounding though is how people on reddit defend these people acting this way, even the ones where the video does indeed show the full context of the guy being a complete non-compliant jackass and ending up with like 2 or 3 felonies for no reason. But "All cops are <blank>, because reasons. The cop just should have <insert 10,000 things that put him and others in danger>" and "If the cop would have just let him talk and give him a chance to comply, this would not have happened!!" completely ignoring the fact the guy was literally telling the cops to f-off talking non-stop, not letting them say anything, and visibly trying to leave while being detained.

It got me thinking, are the bombastically rude, hateful comments from people online literally just be the same people (personality types*) of the people we see on bodycams?

Is that why these internet types are so insanely anti-cop, because the sad truth is a majority of these anticop people online are just the same personality types and they're just not capable of seeing the bad behavior as bad, and as a result, their loud, bombastically obnoxious attitudes are over represented online because, like in the bodycam, they just can't f'n shut up.

reddit.com
u/RaymondDoerr — 1 day ago
▲ 3 r/AskLEO

A fun observation; Personality types of people on bodycam vs social media comments.

Hey all, I have been watching bodycam videos lately for fun, getting into the ones from guys like Midwest Safety, Code Blue Cam, Sgt. Curtis, etc.

One thing I noticed, first of all, is how absolutely non-compliant people are for literally no reason what so ever. The amount of people who talk a brake light out casual "Just letting you know" warning into a full ass felony for assaulting an officer, and drug charges for the following "Illegal!!1!" car search is absolutely astounding.

What is more astounding though is how people on reddit defend these people acting this way, even the ones where the video does indeed show the full context of the guy being a complete non-compliant jackass and ending up with like 2 or 3 felonies for no reason. But "All cops are <blank>, because reasons. The cop just should have <insert 10,000 things that put him and others in danger>" and "If the cop would have just let him talk and give him a chance to comply, this would not have happened!!" completely ignoring the fact the guy was literally telling the cops to fuck off talking non-stop, not letting them say anything, and visibly trying to leave while being detained.

It got me thinking, are the bombastically rude, hateful comments from people online literally just be the same people (personality types*) of the people we see on bodycams?

Is that why these internet types are so insanely anti-cop, because the sad truth is a majority of these anticop people online are just the same personality types and they're just not capable of seeing the bad behavior as bad, and as a result, their loud, bombastically obnoxious attitudes are over represented online because, like in the bodycam, they just can't f'n shut up.

reddit.com
u/RaymondDoerr — 1 day ago

What the heck is up with the Days Without Incidents bonuses? It seems random.

Basically the title. I am making an outdoor "Forced Labor Camp" prison that is mostly a forestry and workshop. The area this guy was killed with a stun baton was within the prison and as far as I know he wasn't escaping.

I got the death notification when I watched him get stun batoned to death but it seemingly had no impact on my incidents.

I know murders/escapes count, and odd things like non-prisoner deaths don't count (I had a prisoner kill his parole lawyer and it didn't count).

Also in the same day, I had another attempted escape that resulted in the prisoner dying, but then he instantly "undied" and became unconscious, no idea there either, but this also didn't count against my incidents and it happened in the same day.

https://preview.redd.it/tb2vmr71qx4h1.png?width=2296&format=png&auto=webp&s=f14907caa18025c0f18ecb2246c0edc8d0fa64be

reddit.com
u/RaymondDoerr — 7 days ago

Confused about "Slow Deliveries" mutator.

Simply put, what does this actually do? I've not seen a single "extra" thing that had to be delivered on a truck, the setting seems to do nothing?

Maybe I've just not been playing with it on long enough, I'm only on day 3 of my new save.

u/RaymondDoerr — 9 days ago

Is "abandoning" (Via selling/restarting) a failing prison to start over with more cash exploitive?

Just curious what people's opinions are here.

Right now, I'm doing a PA run where I start with minimal starting cash, small plot, and a lot of modifiers/DLC enabled, making the game really tough to manage in a lot of cases.

Now, because of this, starting on a small plot with 30k and my settings I've ended up in a weird death cycle where I am now on Prison 3, thinking about selling and starting Prison 4. Each time I sell, it's because something isn't quite right or I see a huge unsolvable problem ahead I'd rather redesign for. But now, I am able to start a brand new game with like $500k, so I can damn near build out a whole prison and knock out the entire research tree before I even accept a single prisoner.

I know a lot of comments will say "Play your own way" and "Make your own fun" without really considering the context (or even reading beyond the title), but that's not what I'm asking here, I'm asking how you personally feel about it.

So, while I am having fun anyway, am I kinda exploiting the game mechanics? I know this is a sandbox, and I know you make your own rules. But what do your rules say about this?

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u/RaymondDoerr — 11 days ago
▲ 6 r/AskLE

Just a random thought I had discussing with friends and we couldn't find a clear answer.

I know there's all sorts of regulations/etc for recruitment, just like in the military. But could someone in their 40s theoretically still become a cop or is that far too late to start the process?

I know, obviously, they would be behind the 20-somethings who signed on young, but could someone whom is say, former military, good record, in very good shape, not retired, still become an officer assuming they can pass all the same evaluations/tests the younger guys can?

reddit.com
u/RaymondDoerr — 1 month ago