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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • Well, at least she looks good in it.

    Having hired suits and whatnot before to go to weddings, I’m not quite seeing the logic here. $19k “tax the rich” dress seems a bit of a tasteless disconnect between medium and message, but renting it for $1k doesn’t seem crazy. Committee “did their own research” and thought $3k would be more appropriate, when most attendees pay nothing at all? Surely getting her fee refunded would be more in-line?


  • The two-boss combo => Ornstein and Smough? It can kind of go two ways:

    • the first time you play DS, you’ll get to that point in the game, and then the fact that your build is probably sub-optimal in many ways, combined with not really having had to fight two enemies with different movesets before, means that you’re going to have a really bad time. Can’t kite these boys out to fight them separately. Anor Londo isn’t particularly great for grinding - you get a lot of souls, but the drops aren’t great, so you’re probably going to be going back a long way to get better stuff.

    • every time you replay DS after beating it, you know these guys will be coming, and you’ll have a decent build and decent weapons specifically for them. AL is about the point where a magic build really takes off and you’ll finish the entire boss battle in the time it takes to cast crystal soulmass about three times, but there’s plenty of viable builds for them. Last few times I’ve played it through, I’ve beaten them first time - it’s a completely fair fight and it’s not hard, exactly; just very unlike anything else you’ve had to do in the game.

    Alas, defeating O&S means that you’ve pretty much finished the good bit of Dark Souls 1. It’s a near flawless-game up until then, enough to rate it as one of the finest games of all time, and then they ran out of dev time. Duke’s Archives is good, but brief. Londo Ruins is fine, but the boss is DPS race. Tomb of the Giants is ass. Lost Izalith is beyond ass; should have remained lost. Fortunately, the DLC is excellent and you can go and play that instead.


  • If we had the technology to freely form diamond, then it’s exceptionally hard, has incredible chemical resistance, among the very best thermal conductivities of any material, and it isn’t particularly heavy.

    Being able to coat the inside of chemical vessels and pipes with diamond would hugely increase their lifespan, a heat exchanger made out of it would be incredible. Great for food processing, since you’d be able to clean it easily; great for abrasive or highly acid / alkili materials that corrode everything else. Probably awesome as a base layer for semi-conductors, as it would be great for heat dissipation.

    But we are probably talking about nanotechnology to lay it down in sheets, which we don’t have (yet).







  • You’d assume that, but then you’ve not had the misfortune of using Google Cloud. “Because fuck you, that’s why.” – Sundar Pichai.

    The big benefit of AWS Linux and Azure Linux is they start up really really quickly on their respective platforms, so if you’ve an app to run that’s fairly platform agnostic then it’s easy to deploy at scale. If it’s not very platform agnostic then you’re in for a world of pain. AL2023 in particular seems to just rename all the packages differently from any other distro just for the fun of it.


  • Ritardando = slowing down, it’s a tempo notation.

    pp = pianissimo (very soft), mf = mezzoforte (medium strong). One of my old conductors would say “it’s not about volume, it’s about feeling”, so intensity is a good word, although it often refers to volume. One of the main jobs of the conductor is making sure the music is interpreted in a way that fits the venue; pianissimo can be quite loud (but ‘soft’) in a big auditorium.

    Die doesn’t mean anything - at least, not too me as a violinist. Might just be a percussion instruction to let the sound die away, rather than muffling it.




  • addie@feddit.ukto196@lemmy.blahaj.zoneNever obsolete rule
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    25 days ago

    I have the same gigabytes of ram as that has megabytes and my graphics card nearly the same storage as the hard drive. Oof.

    I used to have a PC like that, though, as an upgrade from an Amiga 1200. Amiga was a great gaming and coding machine, but struggled a bit for ‘office’ work and was more suited to bulletin boards than websites. A PC like that thing got me through university, though - able to do it all. I don’t remember the internet as being much worse, back then - more limited, but so much less shit on it. And if you get a list of the best RPGs of all time, it can probably run three-quarters of the list.


  • I have a Tuxedo Pulse 14 gen 3 as my personal laptop, was looking for something with a bit more display resolution than my old 1080p machine, but did not like the price of 4K laptops.

    It has been superb for over a year now. Came with Tuxedo’s own Linux, which looked pretty but wasn’t for me. Installed Arch on it, has been rock solid. Is a great machine for coding on, makes a great job of running Dwarf Fortress and less stressful 3D games - Crusader Kings 3 and Disco Elysium run great, for instance. Battery life impressive too.

    Been quite robust, too - heard complaints that the lid can get a bit loose but mine’s fine. All the rubber feet have come off the bottom, but that’s probably because I use mine on my lap. They prefer that you install their own fan control app rather than eg. just providing drivers so that you can set it up in CoolerControl, but it works fine.

    All in all, good machine. Better than the ThinkBook that it replaced, and those are fine laptops.




  • I’ve found that disabling VSync in games entirely and then letting MangoHud do the limiting works a bit better. Some of that will be because I’m using Proton on Linux, which has DXVK as a translation layer. Games will be trying to limit their frames the DirectX way, whereas MangoHud is limiting them the Vulkan way and is ‘closer to the monitor’ for keeping the pace right.