I have little dance moves that I like to use when walking around the office. Little turn on heel here, stand on tiptoe there, round the corner in a fluid motion, balance on one leg, little jump, etc.
You might enjoy the 1996 Japanese film Shall We Dance?. The protagonist is taking ballroom dancing lessons in secret but when walking around the office subtle dance-inspired moves creep in. :-)
Title says plugged in and body says plugged in at 100%; these can be separate concepts if one has fine control over the charging voltage.
Will leaving my things plugged in at 100% hurt it more than constantly unplugging at 80% and replugging at 20%?
Plenty of academic research out there showing that pegging Li to 100% SoC reduces cycle counts to EOL (by electrolyte degradation and other processes), especially at higher voltages/temps. You didn't mention capacity reduction associated with charging at freezing temps so I assume that is a non-issue in your use case.
It seems to me that if leaving it plugged in is an option you have shore/mains/grid power. So I'd
charge to middling SoC and unplug the powerstation (according to the manual); and
run the loads off the wall socket
Am I missing something here?
offgrid with LiFePO4
I live offgrid with Li on a very limited budget, so performance and maximal cycle life is a practical matter for me. Based on my own reading and experimentation I charge my 4S LiFePO4 to 13.8v (3.45Vpc) until Absorption falls to 0.10C then quasi-float at 13.31v (3.3275Vpc). I warm them to 50F and charge at ≤0.4C.
Wiki link goes elsewhere. But when I read the summary above it sounded a lot like Hotel Coolgardie. So I looked up the RH wiki article; yup, inspired by that doc.
I have always liked watching how smoke plumes move in the air
I enjoyed the math and the physical action of making coils
How much e-liquid do you get through in, say, a month?
I don't remember, it's been a few years. Maybe a hundred ml?
Have you ever been tempted to try e-liquid containing nicotine?
I had bulk nic for making juice for others. I do not enjoy nicotine and would not take it for recreational purposes. There is some evidence that there are neuroprotective aspects, so had I continued I might have added 0.5mg/ml or something for that purpose.
I stopped because I travel fulltime now and the constant altitude changes caused constant leaking and mess.
In the late 90s I taught an intro course for folks who wanted to run *nix boxen (Solaris, IIRC). On the afternoon of the last day I had them swap places after lunch and gain root access to each others' machines. It was partly for root passwd recovery and other maintenance tasks, but also to demonstrate that physical access to the box was a serious issue.
A friend was vaping to stop smoking and was complaning about flavors and cost of the juice. I wanted to DIY for him and ended up enjoying the overall experience.
Note: descreasig nic mg for him, 0mg for me.
Do you regret having ever started? If so, why do you regret it?
No.
Have you noticed any long-term negative health effects from vaping?
No.
Do you feel that the socialogical and/or legal issues around vaping are more or less of a concern than health effects?
Big Tobacco and neo-puritains have teamed up to flood the zone with FUD. A classic "baptist and bootlegger" scenario.
Do you feel that the financial cost of vaping is more or less of a concern than the health effects?
DIYing one's one coils and juice can make the cost quite minimal, and increase control over what you put into your body.
I've had dogs all my life and have chosen zero of them for their intelligence. My best-ever dog (greyhound) was a beautiful dullard by dog-intelligence standards. My current companion is a box-'o-rocks pibble whose unbounded goofiness and joy makes passers-by smile.
But I once adopted a young doberman from a shelter who kept me on my toes. So did so many crazy-smart things that it's hard to think of one. She'd unwind her lead off of obstacles, learn things I didn't necessarily want her to learn, etc. She was a real challenge, like having a toddler around.
Murderbot, but I don't think it could make the transition to film.