

It’s insane that disposables with lithium ion batteries are legal.
It’s insane that disposables with lithium ion batteries are legal.
I hope RSS feeds never die. Antennapod forever.
If all you want to do is game, why not get a Steam Deck?
Nice! “Drunk II” is one of my favorite tracks from them.
Also, thanks for reminding me to donate to KEXP! Today is the last day of the Spring drive.
I made a function bound to <leader>cd
that opens up the file editor in the directory of the currently open buffer. I use it all the time. I’ll post the snippet if anyone is interested.
Multi cursor stuff is cool. Maybe not a one to one replacement, but I tend to use global commands to do basically the same thing.
This is the closest thing I’ve heard of that does some sort of casting. AFAIK it doesn’t replace chromecast. I’ve never actually used it.
My solution to this since my house is small is to use an amp that supports multiple speakers that all the devices connect to and then wire speakers through the house. I’ve thought about connecting the amp to a small computer and streaming the audio to my sheds using ROC. The neat thing about this solution is I can play my records and tapes too and listen to them seamlessly between rooms.
Definitely not turkey tail. I asked my partner and they say it is possibly a resinous polypore or something similar, which could be a good place to start with IDing it.
Nintendo controllers 😬
My experience may be dated, but I’ve always had issues with controllers on Windows and Linux. Less so with Linux these days because my controllers are dated and the drivers are in the mainline kernel.
The biggest issue was solved with steam and it’s controller interface / community layouts.
It’s going to be a lot smaller since it doesn’t bundle a version of chromium in every build. Instead it uses the systems native web view. This does pose the problem of vendor specific rendering issues… How snappy it feels is down to how the front-end programmed. It can still be a mess of bloated JavaScript 🙂
Forbidden desert! Great co-op game. We used to call it Die in The Desert because my group was so bad at it.
What’s the advantage of running this server side?
Get a can of black beans and some rice. Make the rice, put the beans on top. Black beans and rice.
Totally, pretty much all browsers include a way to simulate network conditions. Chrome also includes a way to simulate CPU slowdown.
Prioritizing developer experience is not the reason we use front-end frameworks. People expect the web to work like a desktop app (no page reloads). The initial request might take a little bit longer, but in the end a well written front-end app will feel faster.
The problem is that people don’t worry about bundle size and cram every library off of npm into their website.
Not 100% sure how this works, but dam and river usually means environmental consequences.
The thought of mega corps polluting the night sky with satellites makes me so bummed.