FirstWizardZorander

joined 1 year ago
[–] FirstWizardZorander@lemmy.one 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Pebble was one of the good ones. I've gotten an inexpensive one running Android Wear, but I find myself seldom wearing it compared to my dumb watch. I wore my Pebble every day since it could last a damn week or more without charging, and the screen was very pleasant to the eyes.

[–] FirstWizardZorander@lemmy.one 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Hmm, I tried from lemmy.ml as well, as you're on that instance, and it doesn't seem to work from there. Some federation issue due to load maybe?

[–] FirstWizardZorander@lemmy.one 2 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I think I went to the search function and searched for !mechanicalkeyboards@kbin.social Some time after that, the link started to work.

 

Hello there! Thought I'd kick this community off with a question.

Which keyboard(s) are you currently using?

Myself, I like to rotate, but the one I'm using right at the moment is an Akko 3068 with Akko CS Jelly Purple switches. I got it as it was available locally and supports hotswap. However, I've fallen in love with the included switches. They have a very pronounced tactility and feel very smooth.

[–] FirstWizardZorander@lemmy.one 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (5 children)

How would you access this from Lemmy? Does there need to be explicit federation?

I'm on lemmy.one, and I've tried https://lemmy.one/c/mechanicalkeyboards@kbin.social, but it doesn't seem to do anything but give me a 404

EDIT: Never mind, it seems something happened in the background, and the link now works for me.

I'm currently messing around with a simple room booking app in rust/actix, but instead of simply using one of the existing authentication middlewares, I've rolled my own to learn more, and damn, has it been a fun ride learning how the borrow checker works!

When I first started my Linux journey about 23 years ago, I only ran it in text mode, since my computer didn't have the disk space for X. I remember using Vim, and whenever I wanted to close it I would hit Alt-F4, which of course performed a VT switch.

When I inevitably launched Vim again on VT4 and wanted to close it, I obviously coudn't, but I got the idea that Alt-F5 was a more powerful Alt-F4, so I used that.

After that I figured I was stuck and rebooted the machine.

Right now I'm mainly gaming on my Switch for Nintendo first-party games, and Steam Deck for most of the rest. I have a Linux workstation that has an RX6600, so I use that for the more demanding titles, or when I just want keyboard/mouse.