I turned everything off about 2 years ago after getting annoyed by autocorrect making more mistakes than me. I like that the keyboard takes up less space and my typing has improved dramatically since then. I can type whole paragraphs now without making a single typo. I regret nothing.
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Combativ@feddit.orgto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What seemingly backwards solutions have worked for you in life?14·1 month agoThat’s a very clever trick. I didn’t know routers could do that.
Combativ@feddit.orgto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•If you could get something for free the whole year, what would it be?6·1 month agoMy first thought was a local swimming pool. But infinite stocks would also be cool, I guess.
Combativ@feddit.orgto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What’s one of your favorite classic YouTube videos of all time?15·2 months agoOutside in, how to turn a sphere inside out.
Combativ@feddit.orgto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Hey Lemmy, what browser do you use and why?8·2 months agoAlways been Firefox for its reliability and it has just the features I need and want from a Browser. Switched to Floorp for a few months because of its “tab spaces” but with Firefox’s new tab grouping feature it has been my main again.
It’s too cute! 🥹
Haha, so geht’s auch. Hab den gar nicht gesehen.
I can solve the 3x3 in under 30 seconds, the 2x2 in less than 8 and the 4x4 in 2 minutes and under. Speedcubing is a really addicting hobby once you get to know some people. I have since stopped practicing, but the muscle memory is something that will stay forever.
But that doesn’t mean that you have to be interested in speedsolving the cube at all. There are all kind of people, some never learned (or want to learn) the Rubik’s Cube and just play with it like a fidget toy, some like to solve it in the wildest ways possible (including fewest moves, blindfolded or very obscure solving strategies), and others just want to learn it once to cross it from their bucket list.
If you belong to the latter, you should look into “beginner method” tutorials online. I personally have learned the Cube from my father when I was 6, because it looked fun and I wanted to be able to solve it as well, but the method he used was actually very inefficient. Only in my teen years did I start to time my solves and improve a lot, not least by learning more efficient methods like “CFOP” and “Roux”.
I didn’t want to read it at first, but I kinda like it now. It was quite fun to read… and I can totally relate.
Life of Brian