(Part 2) Top products from r/Rochester

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We found 20 product mentions on r/Rochester. We ranked the 71 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/Rochester:

u/[deleted] · 3 pointsr/Rochester

I'm not sure-- MCC is a little more picky about prereqs, and actually make you prove that you've met them before they just let you register, which threw me off since I knew people on my Freshman hall who registered for grad level Physics classes without a hitch at UR. They're really friendly and helpful though, and if you have a CS course under your belt they might not know the difference.

Here is the description of CSC101 at MCC-- if you feel like you've covered most of that stuff in JS, then you can probably pick up a book and learn the specifics, and then talk to the instructor for whatever courses you're interested in.

Data Structures usually follows up CS101 and generally is full of useful info, but MCC's schedule was full last time I looked? But in general, people at MCC were really chill, compared to UR where the only chill people seemed to be the professors who were so far into tenure they were basically retired. If you just show up at MCC and go to the Registrar to try to register, they do a good job putting you in touch with the right people and, you know, advising you if there is a problem.

But if you don't want to pay for the class, Udacity's Intro to Computer Science is really good, and then leads nicely into a lot of other courses they have. In general, if you are looking to learn the skill and be able to say you can do it, but don't need to specifically prove it to anyone, the online stuff more than suffices, and is frequently better than actual classes if you have the self-discipline to do them.

u/rook218 · 1 pointr/Rochester

I think I've identified our fundamental sticking point.

You believe that rolling back regulations, cutting back taxes, and scrutinizing companies less encourages competition. I think that it's not so simple.

For beer, yes. It's obviously worked, and even Cuomo is fighting for less regulation of ciders and wines in order to bring jobs to the finger lakes region. For simple commodities, deregulation (to a point of public safety) is very often a good thing.

But here's where we have a difference of opinion. Firms hate having to compete. They would much prefer to own the market and face no competition. So a firm that is sufficiently successful will undercut, buy out, and manipulate the market to cut out competition. It's natural. That has to happen in an unregulated free market. Part of competition is success and failure, and the ones who succeed are, by definition, gaining more control of the marketplace. They use this control of the marketplace to take part in anti-competitive practices and shut out new or smaller businesses. Look at Disney, Comcast, Cargill, Microsoft... Proof of that line of thinking is in the pudding. So, in my view, deregulation is anti-competitive in most cases.

If you can stand John Oliver's forced humor, check out this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=00wQYmvfhn4

Now here is a bit of circular logic that my point includes: When corporations get large enough, they are able to lobby government in order to put up legal barriers to entry for new businesses, and use governmental power to cement their positions and grow even more powerful. That's what happened with craft beer, and that's why deregulating works for that industry. Getting rid of nonsensical regulations that only serve one corporation's anti-competitive interests is not the partisan issue that we are discussing. It's incredibly obvious that these regulations should be thrown out.

But libertarianism doesn't solve the root of that issue. It prevents the regulations from legally cementing a monopoly, but it doesn't do anything to solve the other levers they have to stifle competition. It doesn't prevent them from bringing frivolous lawsuits against smaller competitors in an attempt to bury them under legal costs that the competition can't absorb. It doesn't prevent them from undercutting the price of their competition for just long enough to bankrupt the smaller, less adaptable firm. It doesn't prevent them from hiring out all of a rival firm's employees for just long enough to destroy that firm, then having a round of layoffs. It doesn't prevent massive corporate buy-outs that put an entire industry into the hands of a few different companies, many of which have the same people on their boards. These are the kind of anti-competitive actions that firms would love to be able to do, and that libertarianism cannot cope with. Making it harder or impossible for firms to do things like this are the types of regulations that I support - I don't have a blanket love of regulation for its own sake, just like you don't love all deregulation for its own sake.

To me, this isn't even a discussion anymore than arguing what color the sky is. A cursory overview of history shows that we regulated ourselves into prosperity. One of the best books I've read on it is called American Amnesia and I'd recommend at least reading the description. Don't forget that the most libertarian time in our nation's history was called the Guilded Age for a very good reason. Libertarianism gave us the roaring twenties just as much as it gave us the great depression. Government spending and regulations brought us out of that depression and we remember the fifties so fondly because of Lyndon Johnson's Great Society. Libertarian systems have failed before (for the reasons that I've outlined here) and there is no reason to think that it will be any different if we give it another try.

So back to the high-minded idealism of both of our arguments and getting out of the weeds of healthcare, etc... That is why I believe that libertarianism (even at its best) is an inherently flawed philosophy.

u/FlourCity · 2 pointsr/Rochester

Your insurance company didn't come to inspect either after you bought the house? Maybe my insurance company is weird that it did come and inspect.

Anyways, it's going to be quite expensive. I haven't paid someone to do it, but I have gotten rid of old knob and tube (not being use) and replaced it with proper modern stuff.

What is the power coming into your house like? You have a breaker panel, fuse panel, or what?

If you are the DIY'er type, I would hire someone to install a breaker panel and move all your current circuits to that (I'm assuming you've got fuses). Make sure he installs a breaker panel with enough spaces you can fit all your proposed circuits in. Form there, just pick a room/circuit and re-wire it and then add that to the panel. It's not all that hard, just time consuming. Also, as long as you have half a brain about how electricity works, test wires to make sure they aren't hot (you flipped the breaker already, right?) it's kinda hard to hurt yourself.

Here is a great book.
http://smile.amazon.com/Wiring-House-5th-Pros/dp/162710674X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1463502073&sr=1-1&keywords=wiring+a+house+rex+cauldwell

u/mattBernius · 5 pointsr/Rochester

God. Goddess. Earth Mother. Whatever... Save us from Wall Street Analysts...

Seriously, these folks don't know their ass from their elbow and make oodles on money in a business where they never have to actually answer to their recommendations and predictions because they change jobs and start analyzing different fields every 12 to 18 months.

These are the same people who, for much of the 1990's kept saying that there was no future in Digital Cameras and that Kodak should pour all of it's development efforts into PhotoCD. (source: http://hbr.org/2010/07/wall-street-is-no-friend-to-radical-innovation/ar/1 and the linked journal article).

There was a terrific ethnography published a few years ago that really gets to all of the underlying issues with the entire Investment Banking and Analyst structure. If you're remotely interested in the topic, it's a great read:
http://www.amazon.com/Liquidated-Ethnography-Street-Franklin-Center/dp/0822345994

u/ThrowUpsThrowaway · 5 pointsr/Rochester

I came across this story because I just got done reading this book published in 1999 called Moments: the Pulitzer Prize Winning Photographs and two of the winners from the late 80's and early 90's were RIT grads (can't remember what their names were. Wanna say it was 1988 and 1991 were the years in question.)

u/boner79 · 1 pointr/Rochester

I'm not saying there aren't benefits to extracurricular activities, but it's an objective fact that the US ranks below many other industrialized nations in academic achievement. An analysis of these other country's school systems shows they place greater emphasis on academic rigor and less emphasis on athletics. Texas' "Friday Night Lights" culture is an extreme example of this. These small Texan towns live for football, kids and parents alike, with academics being secondary.

If you want to learn more about the educaitonal cultural differences between US and other high-performing countries I recommend this book:

https://www.amazon.com/Smartest-Kids-World-They-That/dp/145165443X

u/AmbassadorOfZleebuhr · 2 pointsr/Rochester

Tryon Bike

Join their wrench club & buy this book:
https://www.amazon.com/Zinn-Art-Mountain-Bike-Maintenance/dp/1934030597

Ask lots of questions (bike people are nice folks) and try to become self sufficient with basic repairs because it's all pretty simple and walking home sucks!

u/ronisolomondds · 3 pointsr/Rochester

Thanks for that link, I forgot this was on Google Books.

Let me get back to you on the recommendations of antique books. I am in the process of moving and most of this stuff is packed away. For more recently published works, I would recommend two that Rose O'Keefe authored; one on the South Wedge and another on Southeast Rochester.

u/pineapple_catapult · 2 pointsr/Rochester

Snow tires are immensely helpful. If you don't have snow tires, then Continental DWS (dry/wet/snow) are apparently a good all-season alternative.

Get a snow brush like this: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07Y3ZMTBB/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_U_qn6WDbA187ZDF

Keep a shovel, emergency blanket, winter hat, and a pair of gloves in your car. Freezing to death cause you spun off into a snow bank isn't fun. There's more safety related stuff you should keep in your car as well, but these are specific to winter needs.

Make sure your exhaust doesn't get blocked by a snow mound, or if you spin off the road. Death by carbon monoxide isn't fun either.

Keep more distance and drive slower than you think you need to when driving in bad weather. Also, overpasses/bridges freeze faster than the road, so expect ice there even if everything else seems OK.

Salt melts ice effectively only to about 10 degrees Fahrenheit. If temps are lower than that, exercise extreme caution, even if it's not snowing and the roads seem clear. Black ice can be anywhere. This is where snow tires will help you a lot.

Get an oil change before and after winter, even if you don't need it by the miles driven.

u/seanlahman · 2 pointsr/Rochester

The Hammer Conspiracies is great but out of print and hard to find.

u/lotusstp · 1 pointr/Rochester

Oddly enough, a couple of significant inventions linked to Rochester aren't mentioned. If you read "Dealers of Lightning: Xerox PARC and the Dawn of the Computer Age" (available at your local public library), you'll discover that a) Ethernet and b) Laser Printing were both invented @ PARC.

u/liquidh20 · 2 pointsr/Rochester

i have this stuff to clay

http://www.amazon.com/Meguiars-Smooth-Surface-Clay-Kit/dp/B00063X7KG/ref=sr_1_1?s=automotive&ie=UTF8&qid=1377392115&sr=1-1&keywords=meguiar%27s+clay

and alright i think i got it, its about 100 but at least i can do it multiple times. i guess the whole thing is going to take a couple of hours

u/servo1056 · 1 pointr/Rochester

www.democratandchronicle.com/story/news/2018/04/03/amazon-henrietta-jobs-distribution-dinolfo/483407002/

http://www.rochesterfirst.com/news/local-news/large-amazon-facility-coming-to-henrietta/1098719123

u/MikeyPh · 1 pointr/Rochester

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-08-25/how-slavery-hurt-the-u-s-economy

https://www.forbes.com/sites/simonconstable/2017/04/24/why-slavery-wasnt-just-a-monstrous-evil-it-was-also-bad-economics/#39dc8b2312a1

This is the book the previous link cites: The Poverty of Slavery: How Unfree Labor Pollutes the Economy

https://www.econlib.org/archives/2014/09/ending_slavery.html

You will no doubt dismiss these articles because you have been dishonest heretofore. You should apologize for that, btw. It's pretty shitty what you've done here.

Lastly, freer people are more prosperous.

Take care.