It would still work. But it is VERY dangerous. 1. The far end of the light string will now have exposed metal prongs that are energized at 120v, which can be fatal. 2. If the other end gets plugged into a socket, there is a 50% chance it will be a different circuit on a different phase, which can create a 240v direct short, across a wire that has no properly sized circuit breaker. 3. Using it to plug a generator into your house during a power outage can kill electrical workers trying to fix the outage if you fail to open your circuit breakers.
brianorca
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If someone can’t make the own cord, what’s the chance they know how vital it is to flip the breaker?
Two things: 1: there’s a high chance you do cross live and neutral, or even live and live on different phases. 2: using it to plug in a generator to power your house can kill electrical workers who are trying to restore a power outage. (If you fail to open your circuit breaker.)
It also falls off too easily. My favorite for this use case is black Gorilla tape. Like duct tape but thicker.
brianorca@lemmy.worldto A Comm for Historymemes@lemmy.world•Show John Wilkes Booth the meaning of honorable conductEnglish1·11 months agoBut was there an undersea cable?
brianorca@lemmy.worldto Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Leaky milk water cheese store bathroom.7·11 months agoMy guess is that’s how high it needs to be for the sewer to flow in the right direction.
brianorca@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•NSA Asked Linus Torvalds To Install Backdoors Into GNU/Linux [2013]241·11 months agoThis is because NSA has two roles: eavesdropping on foreign adversaries, and protecting our internal systems from adversaries. Under the first role, they might introduce an exploit known only to themselves. Under the second, they help protect US systems from exploits known to others.
brianorca@lemmy.worldto Fediverse@lemmy.world•UPDATE! Now 30% of Lemmy Apps display posts accuratelyEnglish2·1 year agoSpoilers in Connect are not readable when I click them. (White on white) Unless I first select the post so the background in grey.
brianorca@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft points finger at the EU for not being able to lock down WindowsEnglish18·1 year agoIt’s a third party kernel module, which Microsoft would love to be able to block, but legally can’t. It’s technically possible to write a virus scanner that runs in user space instead of the kernel, but it’s easier to make sure everything gets scanned if it’s in the kernel.
brianorca@lemmy.worldto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Why is HD or 3D so impressive on a flat screen, but we walk around in real life with the highest definition possible and the most realistic 3D and it's completely mundane?18·1 year agoBecause most of what you look at in real life is mundane. But go find a nice sunset or a green forest, and you can appreciate it. When you see a scene in HD or 3D on the screen, there is a heavy selection bias to show you pleasant scenes that most people seldom see in real life. If it was super 4k and 3D, but it was just your same living room you see every day, it would be uninteresting. But the same camera showing a living room in a 10 million dollar house would be interesting. (And the natural views outside even more so, most likely.)
brianorca@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•A strange "terminal emulator" idea I got, tho I bet this exists10·1 year agoThis actually exists, but for a different operating system. The AS400 (aka iSeries) had a command line where programs had a standard way to specify parameters, so that pressing a prompt key (F4) would allow you to build the proper command line by filling a form. I do miss that, pity it doesn’t exist for Linux.
You can get Mint on a “Live” USB flash drive, so you can boot it up and see if it handles all your hardware before you install anything.
brianorca@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft insiders worry the company has become just 'IT for OpenAI'English11·1 year agoI’m saying it’s happened before. AOL. Palm. Yahoo. Blackberry. A company with an effective monopoly gets complacent and fails to serve their users. They get replaced.
brianorca@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft insiders worry the company has become just 'IT for OpenAI'English510·1 year agoBut that’s also a path for them to no longer be a monopoly, if the right competitor makes the right moves.
brianorca@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•McDonalds removes AI drive-throughs after order errorsEnglish1·1 year agoYou can do that kind of imposed structure if it’s an internal tool used by employees. But if the public is using it, it has better be able to parse whatever the consumer is saying. Somebody will say “I want a burger and a coke, but hold the mustard. And add some fries. No make it two of each.” And it won’t fit your predefined syntax.
brianorca@lemmy.worldto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•It's easier to remember the IPs of good DNSes, too.2·1 year agoBecause bits are not expensive anymore, and if we used 64 bits, we might run out faster than the time needed to convert to a new standard. (After all, IPv4 is still around 26 years after IPv6 was drafted.) Also see the other notes about how networks get segmented in non-optimal ways. It’s a good thing to not have to worry about address space when designing your network.
brianorca@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•McDonalds removes AI drive-throughs after order errorsEnglish3·1 year agoIt’s more than voice recognition, since it must also parse a wide variety of sentence structure into a discreet order, as well as answer questions.
brianorca@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.ml•Leak: EU interior ministers want to exempt themselves from chat control bulk scanning of private messages - EU Reporter3·1 year agoThat sounds more like they are excluding most corporate internal systems, (which would also happen to cover the systems run by government.)
In AC, diodes work half the time, every 1/60 second. The “good” LEDs will have circuitry to fully rectify the AC into DC, drop the voltage properly, and smooth the peaks and valleys, so they will be continuously lit. So the cheap LED Christmas lights might have a slight flicker, and the good ones are steady. (Or get fancy with chasing colors, etc.)
All of that happens inside each of the “bulb” enclosures, or sometimes in a box at one end, so it technically doesn’t matter which end they are getting electricity from, since the socket at the far end is still just connected in parallel to the plug at the near end. (Otherwise you wouldn’t be able to link them together.)
It’s just a really bad dangerous idea to reverse them.