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Redlining

selectfromwhereand.com

34 points by sschnei8 2 years ago · 26 comments

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safety1st 2 years ago

What is redlining? Wikipedia says it's a discriminatory practice of denying credit to minorities.

Edit: OK got it in the article, it's driving a car too fast.

Except your car is your brain and so it's burning yourself out I guess. A little confusing

  • omgtehlion 2 years ago

    Bad analogies are like bananas in a swordfight.

    As a “petrolhead” this instantly triggered me: most cars won’t redline at 100mph, actually they won’t even break a sweat (at like 2.5krpm, when redline starts at 5-8krpm depending on engine type and model). Redlining is _accelerating_ too fast, not _driving_ (this means you cannot “redline” indefinitely long, only for short bursts, even if you are a racing or overly aggressive driver).

    • ajsnigrutin 2 years ago

      American? :)

      In the manual-driving world, you can easily redline a car even below 100km, by just not switching to a higher gear in time (to get faster accelleration)

      • throw__away7391 2 years ago

        You can also redline a car in neutral without moving at all. Even an automatic. What's your point?

        • ajsnigrutin 2 years ago

          Pretty much noone redlines a car in neutral, but reaching the redline with fast acceleration is a thing that even a casual driver might do every now and then (eg. when overtaking)

    • attheicearcade 2 years ago

      Redlining is nothing to do with acceleration. The article has the right definition:

      Redlining: drive with (a car engine) at or above its rated maximum rpm.

    • hinkley 2 years ago

      Well I’ll tell you something my lad. When you’re walking home tonight and some great homicidal maniac comes after you with a bunch of loganberries, don’t come crying to me!

    • rzzzt 2 years ago

      You can when the car is in neutral (hopefully some rev limiter is in place to prevent you from destroying the engine in a relatively short amount of time).

  • valand 2 years ago

    Basically, pushing (e.g. revving) an engine beyond its structural limit.

  • deathanatos 2 years ago

    Wiktionary has a good example photo of a tachometer: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/redline

    I also think of the movie "Redline": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9FZ0AXNldV8

    (But yes, depending on context, the word has the other meaning you note.)

  • odiroot 2 years ago

    In motorcycle world, it's revving your engine so hard it gets into the red line on the tachometer

  • orthecreedence 2 years ago

    Redlining is also the process of editing a legal document, and can in some cases be generalized to editing any document.

  • buro9 2 years ago

    To function at such a level that it is ablative, and impairs sustained performance (or even standard performance)

  • ivanjermakov 2 years ago

    Yep.. I thought this article is about internal combustion engines.

rgblambda 2 years ago

>Spending more time investigating and figuring out why something is needed ~is this actually valuable~ is worth way more in the long run than solving useless problems.

I tried doing this a few times. It's hopeless. Responses to questions range from "I don't know, I was just told" to "Let me get back to you", with the occasional impression that the person being asked is thinking "Why is the worker thinking about the task instead of doing it".

I've come to the conclusion that it's easier to just do the task and leave the why of it to the people who are supposedly paid to worry about that.

  • sschnei8OP 2 years ago

    Fair point, I think I’m approaching that view of just doing it, but I’m not quite there yet. You said it yourself that at least it makes them question the value of said task… and I don’t think bringing it up shines back on me negatively. Regardless I appreciate your thoughts.

    • rgblambda 2 years ago

      >You said it yourself that at least it makes them question the value of said task…

      I'm not quite sure I said anything closely approximating that?

      • sschnei8OP 2 years ago

        “Responses to questions range from "I don't know, I was just told" to "Let me get back to you"”

        I assumed you meant that this created a sense of reflection in the requester as to the value of their ask.

        • rgblambda 2 years ago

          Yeah I can see that now, but for me "I don't know, I was just told" = "Don't know, don't care" and "Let me get back to you" = "I am ending this line of discussion. Don't bring it up again".

          If there's a sense of reflection in the requester, it doesn't survive past the end of conversation with me.

bowsamic 2 years ago

Actual therapy is required for this, it's a very serious issue.

karmakaze 2 years ago

I inadvertently (from time to time) practice a different style more akin to high-altitude training. I'll try doing relatively challenging tasks on little sleep or otherwise non-optimal (e.g. had been drinking) conditions. Sometimes I'm surprised by how complex a task I can do and other times which I can't. Either way it's good to know your limits and push them sometimes, there may be a situation where being high-functioning can save you.

deathanatos 2 years ago

Presumably this was intended to link to the post by that name (https://selectfromwhereand.com/posts/redlining/) and not all posts (where it currently points).

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