I’d like to learn what people in their field think of when they see something good or bad when they’re not working.

I’m a health inspector, so when I am sitting at a table as a customer, I’ll watch people while I’m eating (not purposely staring, but having a look around the place). I recently saw someone swipe their finger under their nose then go to the self serve station to touch about 8 different handles before walking away. Thankfully, I was already done eating.

When I have to walk through the kitchen to the toilets, I take mental notes without meaning to.

As a ex-first responder, unconsciously doing an assessment of someone I’m speaking to (or not) and internally noting how nice and juicy their veins are.

What are some things you come across in your daily life and what do they have you thinking about?

  • trxxruraxvr@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    As a software developer I tend to open the development console in my browser to see if I can remove paywalls or if i can identify errors if a site isn’t working

    • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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      Something I can’t relate to because I’m hopeless with the back end stuff. I’ve always search “pay wall remover” to get rid of the pay walls… And if it still doesn’t work, I just find another article to read. I didn’t realise that you can just remove it on your own end!

  • Harmonious@lemmy.world
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    I’m a production artist so now I can’t really watch a movie or play a video game or see a billboard or something without wondering how they did a certain thing or if I see a small continuity error or something wasn’t masked out properly. It doesn’t detract from the experience, in fact it adds to it. When I see something that amazes me, I think of how I can recreate that by developing new techniques or using a piece of software I’ve never used before. And, I take a mental note of how a story affected me and what part really affected me and I use that as a reference for my own things to reproduce that genuine feeling I have of wonder, excitement, sadness, or fear.

    And, as an artist working in the industry, when I see stuff that other budding artists have done sure I can spot things that could be improved. But, I understand where they’re coming from. I’ve heard a quote that I took to heart “Never criticize, always encourage.” And, so that’s what I try to do.

    • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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      I’ve no experience in your industry or know anyone in it, but I find it so interesting. Thank you for sharing!

      Mildly related (maybe not), I have had friends who recommend certain medical shows to me to watch. I have given them a try, but then I get bogged down by how overdramatised they are with the music, and “Um… They’re not going to revive anyone with those weak compressions.”

  • CaptainPedantic@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I’m a data analyst/software engineer in rocket engine testing.

    I get super excited when I see rocket launches in the news or on the Internet.

    “Woah that’s so cool!”

    “Holy shit! Hardware I touched is on that!”

    “Yooooo. Those engines I tested are on the Moon!”

    • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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      My partner is an engineer and is fascinated with that stuff, too! Me… Not so much. 😂 But that is super cool when you know that you contributed to something.

  • Berttheduck@lemmy.ml
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    Healthcare professional. Play spot diagnosis from people’s walks and stuff observable from a distance. always keep an eye out for people who look like they need help. Always check people at car accidents are out of the cars and calm before driving on. I do the veins thing too.

    • chunes@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      there are so many things that affect how people walk, curious how specific you get or if you’re putting people into broad buckets.

      • Berttheduck@lemmy.ml
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        It’s an entertaining game. I work with elderly care so I think I’m pretty good at recognising Parkinson’s from someone’s walk but yeah other things are harder without talking to someone.

        • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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          Same. I will sometimes think of things like “Might have high blood pressure” or diabetes. I also thought that one of the driver’s I had passed the other day may have had mild Parkinsons when I saw their hand shaking as she took her hand off the steering wheel to the signal stick. It’s always just a passing thought, and I forget seconds later.

  • Linnce@lemmy.world
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    Mechanical engineering. Whenever I see a big piece of tech — say car, plane or any industrial machinery/piping — I think of all the time and effort that went into creating each part of it, from drawing blueprints, modeling, checking national/international standards, choosing materials, running software for calculations, running through different people for approval, assembly, maintenance, etc.

    It’s so much work and even more paperwork. I feel we take what we have for granted.

    • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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      My brain is not that high level when tech 😂 But I also used to be a food technologist in a previous life, so I love to reverse engineer food items! My partner is a mechanical engineer and doesn’t have a food science mind. We’re definitely opposites in that respect. My eyes glaze over when he starts talking engineering. 😅

  • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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    Being trained in behavioral psychology and watching my girlfriend’s sister with her dogs is torture to me.

    She’s got a good boi who barks for attention. She gives him attention every fucking time. He’ll be barking away in the corner while we try to talk, and instead of taking him outside or something, she calls him over to her and pets him.

    I see this over and over again and think, “It’s no wonder he barks so much, when she reinforces him for it constantly.”

    It drives me nuts and honestly makes me not want to go over to her house. I really want to say something, but I don’t want to be that person coming in and giving unsolicited advice to others about how to train their pets. So I just watch it happen over and again and suffer in (bark-filled) silence.

    Edit to add: Also, my brother and his kids. This one hurts more for a number of reasons. He complains about how our mom raised us, but then does the same shit with his kids, never connecting the dots. Meanwhile I learned what not to do by watching my mom. Then through education and working in the field, not only have I been vindicated for the way I interact with kids, but I learned lots of new skills that could help the kids learn appropriate behavior while maintaining their self-esteem. But when my brother’s around, he’s all, “I’m their parent and I’ll raise them my way.” Even his own parents-in-law told him, “You listen to Whats_your_reasoning, she knows what she’s talking about.” But no, I’ve got to not do the things I do every day that could help his kids and his life in the long run because he doesn’t want to hear it.

    • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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      Oh gods. I feel the same when I see people and their kids and dogs. I did a few psychology courses in school years ago, so I have some understanding of behaviour. I feel so bad for the animals and kids because they don’t know any better and they are guided by their owners/parents.

      I used to stay at a friend’s house when I first moved to Victoria and stayed in Melbourne for a few weekends. It started to come out that the mum (my friend) was actually bullying her daughter to tears, and the dad would sometimes join in. They said it was “tough love”. I don’t speak with her anymore.

      Some people will just do what their parents did to them, but it doesn’t make it right.

    • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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      Been there about two months ago when I had the worst banh mi in the world. I’ve never made one, but I was sure I could have done better. 🫠

    • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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      Don’t we all! 😂 It took me a while to figure out the old Swiffer and Blockbusters commercial were from songs from the 80s or whenever.

    • OneLazyMage@lemmy.world
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      Same here, and then get really sad when I see the awful sign that says it’s going to be yet another warehouse.

      I grow trees

      • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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        That’s so sad. I love trees and they’re so important. It’s disappointing that money seems to always be such a driver in decision-making. 😢

  • Rob T Firefly@lemmy.world
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    Among other things I’m an audio editor and producer, and badly-done audio really grates on my brain. When clips have been poorly chopped together, when a character running away from a monster screams the exact same scream twice, when statements are clearly frankenclips made of fuck knows how many different recordings, my brain raises the alarm.

    This is especially rough when reality TV competition shows are on. I like Drag Race, for example, but RuPaul is employing some idiots hacking at spools of worn-out tape with rusty knives or something.

    “I’m having trouble with this challenge!”

    • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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      Ouch. I actually haven’t come across it very often, but with clips online, it really throws my brain to see the sound and mouth not making the same movement/sound.

  • Aussiemandeus@aussie.zone
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    I’m a crane technician and love diagnosing peoples cars by the horrible sounds they make when they drive past me

    • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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      I hope I haven’t driven by you 😂 My dad is a car and heavy machinery mechanic, so I can definitely hear when something is a little off, but as for diagnosing, no chance!

      • Aussiemandeus@aussie.zone
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        I used to get into my friends car and tell him something sounds wrong and he should look into it.

        A month or two later it would fail and it happened so often he asked me to stop pointing things out cause I’m cursing him when I mention it haha

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            That’s the go haha, shame I didn’t think of that 10 years ago.

            Now days we both have reliable vehicles so it’s less chance things are failing on a monthly basis.

            He did buy a new car last year and said I’m not allowed to mention anything, then politely asked if I do please let him know though haha

            • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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              I probably wouldn’t have thought of that on the spot either! I think him asking you to let him know if you notice any issues quietly says that all this time, he has trusted you even if he couldn’t admit it, haha!

  • neidu3@sh.itjust.worksM
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    Excluding the IT aspect of my job, I am unable to walk past a ship without thoroughly examining its mast to see which antennae it has and determine the capabilities.

    Some tidbits I’ve noticed:

    • A HF radio is popular, despite the ship otherwise not being rated for areas where HF radios are required.
    • Older EPIRBs are indestructible provided that the battery and the hydrostatic release units are changed on schedule. I still see models around that are decades old.
    • Starlink is seeing more and more offshore use, but nobody is getting rid of their VSAT.
    • Iridium is starting to make a dent in the amount of Inmarsat-C installations after Iridium became approved for GMDDS.
    • Fleet77 is gone. Haven’t seen it in ages.
    • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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      I understood about 10% of that! But that’s what also makes it so interesting because I’ve not yet come across this before. I love it. Thank you for sharing!

      I don’t know if this is anything of any interest to you, but for some reason, I thought of the Falkirk Wheel in Scotland when I was reading what you wrote. Maybe I made a roundabout connection with my engineering partner and water and then bridges. We didn’t pay to go on, but he specifically wanted to stop here just to see this bridge. Even my non-tech brain thought it was pretty cool.

  • lonefighter@sh.itjust.works
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    I work in EMS. I’m also constantly checking out people’s veins (veins are beautiful!)

    Any house I go into I’m mentally determining if a stretcher would get into the home, how easy it would be to get it around, and how I could get someone out if the stretcher didn’t fit. Basically everywhere I go I’m like “how easy would it be to get you out if you dropped unconscious?” I’m also judging how well the home is set up for maneuverability if the person living there has a sudden loss of mobility - even young people can break a bone and end up on crutches or temporarily in a wheelchair and you want more room to move than you may think. My apartment is up several flights of steps with no elevator, but if I could scoot myself up the stairs and get inside my apartment I’d be ok. I have everything set up in such a way that if I was injured I could get around very well inside for a few months, it would just be the coming in and out that would be a problem.

    I also always back my car into parking spots, because we always back the ambulance in. When we aren’t on calls the ambulance is always backed in so that if we get a call we can leave quickly, and if we are on a call the ambulance is backed in so we can leave quickly if the scene becomes unsafe.

    • StickyDango@lemmy.worldOP
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      They are! But when I can’t see them, I cringe a little inside. I already hate needles, but I HATE fishing. Shudder

      Oh, I’ve never thought so much about stretcher manoeuvrability in a house. I was trained in occupational first aid level 3 (I think it might just be a British Columbia thing, but essentially I could work out in the mining camps and really remote areas where EMS is at least 30 minutes away if they were to drive without slowing), so I only really thought about it in a workplace setting. Also used to work in a stadium, so plenty of space. The hardest part was getting the patient out of the stands…

      However, I have had times where I’ve woken up sweating with my heart jumping out of my chest and thinking I was going to die. From there, it was thoughts of how fast my heart was, was I going to pass out, “where’s my phone”, “Will my eyes focus long enough and can my fingers press the buttons,” “can I make it down the stairs and at least unlock the door”.

      I also always back in to spots as well! Picked that up from just being a woman (quick escape if being chased), from driving the ambulance (again, safety thing). Attended a house once (as a health inspection) and walked by a machete just casually laying on the grass. Had my car pointed down the road, doors unlocked.