Eufalconimorph

joined 1 year ago

Yes, it's a fancy way to save a tab. I just leave the tab open. Not a feature I want, so not something I want them to waste limited development time on. It'd be nice if it were through the bookmarks interface, so booarks could save state & history the way tabs do, but that's not what's proposed so I'd rather not have this. PWAs are a workaround to make up for the limitations of bookmarks.

[–] Eufalconimorph@discuss.tchncs.de 4 points 1 month ago (2 children)

PWAs were a feature I marked "want least". I don't like a cluttered home screen, I'd much rather just use bookmarks.

Mostly joking, but Farenheit is % hot outside.

0°F is 0% hot. Jacket, pants, boots, scarf, etc.

30°F is 30% hot. Shorts, but with boots & an unzipped jacket.

60°F is 60% hot. Shorts, short sleeves, & sandals.

80°F is 80% hot. AC recommended.

100°F is 100% hot. AC or you'll melt.

120°F is Phoenix, Arizona, a city which should not exist and a temperature which should not exist.

People use computers to accplish tasks. That requires running software on an OS, but nobody runs software or an OS just to sit & watch it exist. They run it to accomplish tasks.

Different distros mostly vary in how easy it is to accomplish various tasks. No one distro is the easiest for everything, so people make different choices depending on their needs.

[–] Eufalconimorph@discuss.tchncs.de 7 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Lol! All the historical booms and busts before we stopped using the gold standard apparently didn't happen. Just a conspiracy by historians or something.

[–] Eufalconimorph@discuss.tchncs.de 10 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Of course it's democracy. One dollar, one vote!

Not if they have to see that guy with his pants off!

Kubernetes adds a lot of complexity. In return, it allows various teams in your company to work mostly independently, so that your software stack can mirror your org chart better. It trades latency for scalability (adds network calls to things that could have been local function calls). If your "home lab" isn't serving millions of users, you don't need Kubernetes to run it.

That said, you might be using your home lab partly as practice for a job at a large company where the tradeoffs of Kubernetes make sense (or at least someone thought they made sense and started using it, which is more common). That means using it at home can provide valuable self training, since you can screw around and not take down the production cluster for anyone other than yourself.

[–] Eufalconimorph@discuss.tchncs.de 26 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Pretty much how I DM.

Bosses have prep time. Glyph of warding can be cast on a page in a book, with trigger conditions specified by the caster. E.g. when a good-aligned creature with ≥8 int comes within 10ft of it.

Explosive runes are 5d8 damage (dex save for half) per glyph.

Nothing says it can't be cast on more than one page.

A 50 page book with a glyph on every page means 100 dex saves for 5d8 each. Evasion is nice but you'll fail a save eventually.

Your "friendly" neighborhood lich has had time to prepare dozens of these. That tempting library full of magical books might just be a TPK.

As a "consolation prize" at least the player gets to roll 100 d20s at once! Multiple times if they survive the first book.

Budgerigars (small parrots).

They're active, smart, and social. They fly.

So I made them a flight cage that takes up most of the room they're in. I'd prefer a full walk-in aviary, but don't have room in my apartment.

Cleaning isn't bad, I just shop-vac out the litter tray & refill it with a 20lb bag of corn cob bits. Fresh food in the mornings, take it out & replace with pellets around noon. Clean water daily. Millet treats when I let them out (about an hour per day to interact with them).

Feathers get everywhere when they molt. And feather dust. Their room has its own HEPA filter.

Vet appointments are more expensive for exotics than cats & dogs. There are fewer exotic vets, and I always go to a board certified avian vet. Boarding when I go on vacation is also more expensive (about $50/day), especially since they're flighted.

They're not anywhere near as loud or destructive as larger parrots, but that doesn't mean they're quiet. Just means they might not damage your hearing from the next room. They wake up with the dawn, and let you know about it.

They're extremely sensitive to airborne toxins (avian respiration is rather different from mammalian). That means absolutely no teflon cookware use, no air fresheners, etc.

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