I just use regular ol’ ed
for jotting my thoughts on the AI-related news I see each day. After all, it is the standard text editor.
…was that not the question?
/s
I just use regular ol’ ed
for jotting my thoughts on the AI-related news I see each day. After all, it is the standard text editor.
…was that not the question?
/s
If I understand you correctly, I think “people don’t easily comprehend the significance of increasing orders of magnitude” is a better way to frame it. To use iii’s examples, people perceive a coffee that costs 5 as being 1 unit more than a coffee costing 4. But when comparing two cars costing 40000 and 50000, the human brain tends to just latch on to the most significant digit, and starts to see it the same way: just one unit more.
Tangentially, given our brains’ difficulty processing large numbers, I wonder if this effect leads to money management skills being worse on average in economies with smaller base currency units, such as the Japanese Yen, Indian Rupee, South Korean Won, or for an extreme case study, the Iranian Rial, which currently exchanges at 49,313 IRR ≈ 1 EUR. When your haircut costs 1200000, a new phone costs 18700000, and a new car costs 1331400000, it’s hard to judge the weight of your decisions. When the slightly nicer car costs 1645200000, it’s near impossible to notice that you just spent your coffee money for an entire year (~5 days a week for 50 weeks) on a moonroof and Apple CarPlay. Not sure if that example is applicable to the average Iranian, but eh.
125% times
…is the most cursed thing I’ve seen all day. Especially so when you realize that when you convert it to a decimal of 1.25, the sentence is completely correct. Bravo. 😅👏
Idk, I think that depends on the context in which the rainbow is viewed.
I like to say “cooking with magnets” because 1) it sounds cooler and 2) when people look at me weird I can immediately launch into my spiel about how induction heating is superior to gas in every way.
Okay cool, but what about reconsidering streets from a pedestrian’s perspective?
Wouldn’t it be nice if they were narrower, had raised crosswalks, a rough surface that’s uncomfortable to drive on too quickly, and lines of trees/bollards/gargoyles/^(trees carved to look like gargoyles holding bollards) between the road and the sidewalk to protect pedestrians and provide a better speed reference for drivers?
…come to think of it, the pedestrians (a.k.a. voting taxpayers) would probably rather not pay the taxes needed to finance all these upgrades, and would prefer the much cheaper solution of simply disallowing private automobiles on any street where that is possible. Though, more trees are always welcome. Just about everyone prefers more trees. (As long as the city plants trees of both sexes! Squirrels and allergy sufferers ^(including gargoyles) will thank you!)
I mean, aliases do exist. For example, with my typical alias schema I might shorten it to sudo syc lsu-s
. But yeah, on foreign systems (e.g. random VPS’s) I can see your point.
At least it’s your own brain exploiting you instead of some shadowy cabal of advertising execs and astroturf campaign strategists?
My vote is for a name that I just made up, Aarana. It’s the female form of Aaron, with all a’s. 😄
And like yeah, both the wonderful (and foss!) .json5
and Microsoft’s semi-proprietary(?) .jsonc
exist, but most projects just use their language’s default JSON parser that doesn’t recognize them. What I would personally love to see is .json5
support baked into the default JSON parsing libraries of Python, Go, etc. (Enabled by a flag, likely.) It’s a superset of regular JSON and fully ES2019 compatible, so there shouldn’t be any issues.
I have a relevant meme!
I would add PairDrop to your list to have bookmarked. It’s completely web-based so no download required and thus fully cross-platform. It also works across different networks (i.e. over the internet) by pairing devices or creating a room. Basically Apple AirDrop, but universal and on steroids.
I wouldn’t think this would cause any data loss either, it just wouldn’t find your media or it would throw an error. Very alarmist indeed.
Seems more accurate anyway, it’s not like the concept of recycling even exists digitally. I understand why Windows did it way back when to raise awareness of recycling, but nowadays it’s just a bit silly.
Honestly, it always goes back to the seven deadly sins. In this case, I’d say greed and gluttony are most relevant.
Like @pathos said, that’s the list from the previous step. Because you’re autoremoving, it will only remove packages that aren’t dependencies of any other packages still installed.
For anyone reading this on a Debian-based system, you can get a good start without risking removing anything important like this:
apt-mark showmanual
, and copy any package names you don’t think you need into a list.apt-mark auto <pkg1> <pkg2> ...
apt autoremove
Just install the Auto Tab Discard extension. After a certain amount of time it will replace your loaded tab with a (RAM-free) placeholder that reloads when you click it again. Me, my ADHD brain, and my 500 tabs can be at peace now.
I use FlorisBoard, and I don’t remember having any issues. I’ve only used KDE remote a couple times though, so ymmv.
I’ll also add, besides the obvious public endangerment, street racers are just soooo fricking loud. Noise ordinances exist for a reason, but even where they don’t, nobody likes being woken up by a bunch of metal death boxes screeeaaaming past their window at 3am. (Near me, it’s a posse of motorbikes. I typed that as motorbiles at first. Heh.)