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Scientists claim to have discovered secret to perfect espresso
(www.theguardian.com)
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How can it be a spoiler if we have no fuckin clue what RDT is? 😂
Well, in that case I suggest Lances video on this very paper: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GuqVUsMPs-U
I'm continually amazed at the effort espresso drinkers put into making a coffee
Some of us are a hell of a lot lazier than that lol
That is not what RDT is for coffee beans, lol. RDT is Ross Droplet Technique, which is very much adding water to beans. Named after David Ross who came up with it back in 2005
Edit: post I replied to has now been edited to include the correct answer. The original answer was from chatgpt and completely incorrect so extremely misleading
Christ on a bike, how were we meant to know that?!? Is it too much trouble for you to type something out for us so we can understand you, without having to Google it?
Excuuuuse us for making you press some keys 😂
Shame on you for not guessing which 3-letter acronym was used! /s
You know, I remember in middle school learning the art of Google for research purposes and being amazed that I could find almost any information I could want in minutes. It was also in that time that I first encountered the “Let me google that for you” website that just takes text, shows a mouse moving over the Google searchbar, pastes the text, and then returns the search results. Seeing that made me realize I’d feel a fool if it had to be pointed out to me that I could google the answer to a basic question.
So to see someone acknowledge that they could take one minute to find the answer to what an acronym they don’t know, from a more reliable source than an internet stranger (like the gpt answer above), and then outright refuse to do so on the basis that the answer should have already been spoon-fed to them is frankly bizarre. I sure didn’t know what RDT was when I opened the thread, but just to make sure I wasn’t crazy after reading the threads here I typed ‘rdt coffee’ in my search bar and in less time than it took you to write your comment I had the answer.
I need to understand, what is the process behind your thinking here? Why do they need to explain a 20 year old coffee term in a coffee community that takes less than a minute to learn the basics of if you do the thing you think you shouldn’t have to? I’m really trying to understand without letting judgement seep in, I’m just at a bit of a loss here.
I am very surprised that anybody answering that question wouldn't have been in the hobby long enough to not know what RDT is. Immediately downvoting my actual, factual link to both what RDT is and a deeper dive on the article to it says a lot.
There's a pretty big difference between knowing an acronym for a new term about an old technique, and knowing about the technique itself. Anyone who's lived through a winter knows that static is worse when things are drier. Brewers have added water to grain to improve grinding for ages. I've added a spritz of water to beans for a while, and it's not because someone told me to, it was just common sense. This is the first I've ever heard it referred to as the RDT. You were down voted for being condescending about it
The issue here is posting chatgpt answers as fact without knowing remotely enough about the topic to know it's garbage. I wouldn't dare post answers on random topics I know nothing aboutusing chatgpt as my sole guide, its a proper dick move.
It's been a part of the speciality coffee scene since 2005, and a big part of many recommendations to improve grinding. I would be surprised if anyone who has been an active consumer of coffee content hasn't seen it used at least once.
No mate, the issue is someone having to use ChatGPT to try and figure out what you were talking about, simply because you were too lazy to type a phrase, causing this entire comment chain here.
If you're communicating with other people, it's frankly a tad rude to assume that everyone should spend some of their time working out what you're talking about, rather than taking two seconds yourself to type clearly
This might sound harsh, but it's good advice for the world in general, especially in a professional environment
What utter garbage.
Any community particularly one for nerdy hobbies has jargon as part of it's discussion and doesn't have explanations littered in every instance jargon is mentioned. Part of joining in that community is asking or finding out what the jargon means. Asking like an entitled ass over not understanding jargon in a hobby you aren't familiar with shows what sort of person you are.
Again,, I answered the question when asked.
I wouldn't trust that to tell me anything I didn't already know the answer to, it is fucking useless as it still makes too many mistakes and lies about them