• @[email protected]
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    4 hours ago

    Well, I have an EE Degree specialized in Digital Systems - pretty much the opposite side of Electronic Engineering from the High Power side - and I would be almost as clueless as that guy when it comes to testing a 10,000V fence for power.

    On the other hand I do know a lot of interesting things about CPU design ;)

    • @[email protected]
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      51 hour ago

      What’s the most interesting thing you could tell us about CPU design, something that a layman could appreciate.

      You should know as a software developer I write inefficient code and appreciate all the extra clock cycles we get these days haha.

    • JackbyDev
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      83 hours ago

      Did you know the weird 3d file system navigation thingy was a real program (just not widely used)?

      But I can’t get over the way she held the mouse lol

    • @[email protected]
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      53 hours ago

      The funny thing about that quote is that it really was a Unix system that was shown on screen.

  • @[email protected]
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    337 hours ago

    He must have skipped all of the Electrical Engineering classes in his Paleontology program.

  • @[email protected]
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    126 hours ago

    He is already standing too close and that stick would arc with that many volts flowing through it. The most likely outcome in reality if it had been energized. The arc would have jumped from the stick to him and no more New Zealand guy.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 hour ago

      With only 10’000 V? That’s a common Livestock Guardian*. Reaches at most 1 cm.

      * though it probably has enough ampere to kill a cow

  • Th4tGuyII
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    429 hours ago

    As someone who has worked with academics, the more specialised the person, the less common sense they seem to hold onto.

    As such, if this was outside their PhD specialisation, then it’d absolutely make sense that this wouldn’t occur to them.

    • @[email protected]
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      64 hours ago

      My professor (computer science - NP complete problems specific) had a theory.

      Higher up your education, more and more you learn about less and less.

      I am convinced he accidentally stumbled across Buddhism all on his own (he was a religious Christian, the generous, do not judge others kind). Because Buddha seems to have done his PhD in nothing. Even “wrote” the whole dissertation on nothingness.

    • @[email protected]
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      44 hours ago

      My university basically gave up with a couple of professors. They hired a personal assistant, full time, just to try and keep them organised. They apparently settled on 3 phone calls, to make sure they made lectures on time. It even extended to things like reminding them to actually get their wives birthday presents, and personal book keeping.

      It seems the human brain has a capacity limit. The more specialist knowledge shoved in, the less room for more normal knowledge. Eventually it displaces even the most basic common sense.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 minutes ago

        Meet the German word Fachidiot: (derogatory) A person who is only interested in their own trade or research area and has few or no other interests or skills.

    • @[email protected]
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      45 hours ago

      I’d like to report that the more specialized a medical doctor is, the less common sense they have.

      Had a doctor chew me out because he couldn’t be bothered to simply turn the computer on.

      That was the issue. Pushing a button was beneath him. Cool man, I’m the only one here at this hour and the phones have to be manned constantly. That ticket can go to another department and wait until they come in morning.

      Also, low priority and I noted that the doctor refused to simply turn it on.

      I think that ticket sat there for over a month.

  • Lev_Astov
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    17 hours ago

    At 10kV, a random stick would be all it takes to start an arc. He knows what he’s doing.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 hours ago

      I’m genuinelly curious were you got that from.

      I actually went and checked the minimum air gap to avoid arcing at 10,000V at standard sea level air pressure and it’s actually measured in millimeters.

      Further, is the voltage differential there between parallel conducting lines or is it between the lines and the ground?

      I’m really having trouble seing how a dry stick would cause arcing between two of those lines short of bringing them nearer than 4 mm in the first case, much less between one of the lines and the ground in the second case if its being held at chest level.

      PS: Mind you, it does make sense with a stick which is not dry - since the water in it makes it conductive - but then the guy himself would be part of the conductive circuit, which kinda defeats the point of using a stick.

    • @[email protected]
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      15 hours ago

      True, True… Hay who thought it was safe to run 10,000V Wire through a flammable overgrown jungle?

      • Billegh
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        46 hours ago

        The people who wouldn’t cry about a dino BBQ scenario.

    • @[email protected]
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      917 hours ago

      Yeah, in this case it’s so high voltage that the resistance of the dry stick wont mean as much.

  • @[email protected]
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    3420 hours ago

    I don’t remember the scene, but personally I’d test an electric fence with a nonconductor. You’ll probably get some sparks but won’t die. You do you, ppl in this thread.

  • @[email protected]
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    1891 day ago

    As a PhD who has tried doing home improvement projects, it’s the most believable thing in the film.

    • @[email protected]
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      1820 hours ago

      Some pleeb shouted at me, “I thought you were an engineer!” And I shouted back, “A software engineer!” while I hammer a nail with my shoe.

      • @[email protected]
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        720 hours ago

        I’m a regular engineer and yeah I pull such shit. Listen, there’s a reason I tell everyone not to do what I do.

        • skulblaka
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          1119 hours ago

          The difference between a regular idiot doing a dangerous job and an engineer doing a dangerous job is the engineer knows which parts of the job he’s risking imminent death on. There may often be no other difference.

          • @[email protected]
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            4 hours ago

            When it comes to an engineer doing a dangerous job in a domain other than his or her own, I would say that all the engineer knows is how bad things can be fucked up when one is trying to do expert stuff outside one’s own domain, because they’ve been in a position were they were the experts and some non-expert was saying things and trying stuff for their expert domain.

            After seeing others do it in one’s own expert domain one generally realizes that “maybe, just maybe, that’s exactly how I look outside my domain of expertise to the experts of that domain when I open my big fat mouth”.

    • Bob
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      3523 hours ago

      Actually some of the most naïve people I’ve ever met were theretofore academically successful.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 day ago

      Really?

      Genuinely asking, I’m just an engineer… with very very bad grades. Passed was enough for me.

      Once a professor asked me if I wanted to take the exam again because it was clear that I knew more than what I showed on the exam (a lot of 2 + 2 = 5 mistakes, I was fairly good at that and owe most of my low grades to that). I asked him if I passed, he said yes. Fuck that shit, I’m taking that grade and parading it across town, wooohoo 🥳.

      • GreenPlasticSushiGrass
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        3224 hours ago

        As they say, a PhD is about learning more and more about less and less. Some of the smartest people at conferences I’ve attended legitimately risk death crossing the street.

  • Björn Tantau
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    1511 day ago

    A high voltage electric fence. At some point even standing in front of the thing is enough.

    • @[email protected]
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      34 hours ago

      At 10,000V and at sea level, you need to be at about 4mm from that fence for the air to arce.

      A few posts above I was curious and actually went and checked it.

    • @[email protected]
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      461 day ago

      Air only has so much resistance itself. High enough voltage and the closest path to ground is where the charge will go.

      Just like with Lightning

      • @[email protected]
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        46 hours ago

        Humidity in the air makes that wayyy more dangerous because your skin will be highly conductive and the lower the resistance, the higher the current (which is what really hurts).

        I’ve been a human grounding strap a couple times and don’t recommend it. I think the vibrating pain of AC (someone reenergized the outlet on me) is worse than the punch of high voltage (failing spark plug wire I grabbed with metal pliers while diagnosing a misfire).

    • @[email protected]
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      321 day ago

      My arm once got pulled into an electric fence when I was a kid and I couldn’t stop getting shocked until someone physically pulled me away. It was more of a self-control issue than accidentally bridging the gap.

      That was the day I learned that some pain can be pleasant. The owner of the property didn’t seem as pleased with my discovery as I did. He had to shut off the fence and yanked my arm away and then told me to go explore my perversions somewhere else. I was too young to understand the word “perversion,” and I’m now eternally grateful to that poor unprepared rancher.

      • Björn Tantau
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        111 day ago

        For more fun form a chain with other people and be the furthest from the person touching the fence.

      • @[email protected]
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        521 hours ago

        You find it enjoyable? I regularly touch electric fences, but not because I want to but because I’m too stupid to think of another way to figure out if the thing is working. I find it to be the opposite of pleasant.

        • @[email protected]
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          819 hours ago

          Oh. Here’s your fix:

          A longish piece of green grass. Hold it by one end, then slide it on the fence wire like the grass was a violin bow, getting your fingers closer and closer to the fence. At some point you notice a pinging, or your fingers are touching the fence.

          You can use this to gauge, very roughly, how powerful the charge is at that point.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 hours ago

          I never said it was pleasant. But sometimes some types of pain are the right kind of pain.

          Example of the opposite: when I’m swapping a switch in my old-ass house, sometimes I’m too lazy to turn off the breaker. When I inevitably shock myself, I say “dammit” because I’m trying to concentrate, not discover my preteen proclivities.

          Edit: well slap me silly and call me a liar, I literally said the words “some pain can be pleasant.” I blame this error on undeserved confidence and complacency.

    • @[email protected]
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      1423 hours ago

      At approx 3kV/mm, you would have to be pretty close to a 10kV fence.

      Humidity plays a big role as does the frequency that the fence is running on. But you would be pretty safe standing a meter away, on that dry sunny day in the picture.

      Also above a point, the high voltage causes the conductors to buzz.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 hours ago

        If I’m not mistaking the buzz is because it’s AC hence the buzz frequency is the same as the AC’s.

        Certainly it makes sense that the high voltage would be generated from mains power using a big fat transformer since that’s probably the simplest way to do it.

        • @[email protected]
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          123 minutes ago

          Yep.

          The highest DC voltage I have been near is around 1000V, it didn’t buzz, but 1000V AC also doesn’t buzz…

        • @Zink
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          16 hours ago

          An interesting way to hear this without endangering yourself is to be near transmission lines in a light rain. Some go over a local park near me, and it’s wild how well you can hear it sometimes.

        • @[email protected]
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          421 hours ago

          In some way it is comforting, you know the power is where it is supposed to be… Walking around a 11kV switchyard that buzz is good.

    • @[email protected]
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      101 day ago

      I have a 10KV electric fence. 5KV to 15KV is typical electric fence voltage in a farm or bear prevention fence. Can’t feel a thing unless you actually touch it.

      They are also not lethal. Very low current, just very high voltage. So it only hurts like fuck, but won’t kill a human, cow, or any other mammal that touches it.

      • @[email protected]
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        319 hours ago

        They can kill an animal (including a mammal) if they become entangled and give up out of suffering, though.

        This is pretty rare, but can happen.

        It’s virtually zero risk to a human, though, who can cognize things like getting their hand disentangled from a string (even in a panic situation), or to most mammals, which tend to jerk backwards on contact.

      • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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        623 hours ago

        They can’t kill you, but I know from experience that they can knock you out for a bit if you get shocked through your head.

    • @[email protected]
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      81 day ago

      This is why you should never try to remove a tree from a power line yourself.

      Electricity always takes the path of least resistance back to the source. A tree, and possibly your body, may end up being the “path of least resistance”.

      You won’t know if YOU are the path of least resistance or it the line is even energized until it’s too late.