… I really love Framework overall, but I don’t need a decent CPU/GPU at all … I wish they made an ultra budget mobo with some shitty N200 or whatever is cheapest.
Hopefully their RISC-V plans develop further.
… I really love Framework overall, but I don’t need a decent CPU/GPU at all … I wish they made an ultra budget mobo with some shitty N200 or whatever is cheapest.
Hopefully their RISC-V plans develop further.
imgur used to be really good, minimal ui, super fast.
But we can’t have nice things.
Unless it’s enshitification, we def can have really good enshitification, we are really good at it.
Omg, the og imgur, the basically Reddit image upload service with almost none and then minimal ui, so good.
(A member we flooded the front page with silly thighs of the day from time to time.)
But we can have nice things.
… I mean, I’m a millennial so I just don’t ever answer the door, and this isn’t my fav kind of metal, but I am a bit intrigued.
Yeah, need them hardware manufacturers too.
We would have plenty of Linux phones if drivers were open sauce or even just available closed sauce.
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
What were you Boy doing all night? (:
More the angle of approach & hope for normal crosswinds.
Yeah, also not an expert, but you can see the weird acceleration & how suddenly it got lift again.
2016 not-quite Tour de France.
A group of around 20 llamas were pictured sitting on the road, which forms part of the Tour’s course, on 2 July.
The photographer, Joel Sagada, told the Huffington Post that the herd were bought by the owner of a campsite in La Mongie to maintain the ground in the winter.
However, come the summer, the campsite owner was forced to move them into another area and the herd will now stay in Tourmalet until October.
In the images from earlier this month, the llamas were sitting on the road in order to keep warm in the foggy conditions.
independent.co.uk/sport/cycling/tour-de-france-2016-llamas-stage-eight-col-du-tourmalet-a7128461
The last one is really precious, look at that face.
There are quite a few fun Debian cakes on the internets:
We all owe so much to Debian!
As long as IPv2 support remains intact, I’m good.
/s
Well, modifications to Mercator world maps are not a bad idea, people genuinely don’t understand the size differentness (both ways - equatorial ppl how smol northern & southern territories are & the other way around, eg Europeans how big most of Africa is in comparison).
The bad part of normalising anther type of sphere projection for this purpose is that it almost certainly wouldn’t follow just one simple rule like Mercator’s. And with that exact predictability actually diminished in a way.
Eg, we could try to keep countries as close to the same-ish size & in return shrink (or have gaps in) oceans. Or keep smaller gaps between counties/some squares. Or have several different projections merged into one global map. Etc.
All of it is always arbitrary.
The true answer is only education (not necessarily, but preferability in early school days).
wiki/Waterman_butterfly_projection:
As a treat.