I’ve heard that some laptops with magnetic closures register their lid as closed when someone with a magnetic wristwatch puts their hands near the keyboard!
I was looking for a mouse recently. My priorities were:
I got the Logitech Lift. I am pleasantly surprised by how nice it is.
Granted I mostly use my mouse for browsing, scrolling and navigating UIs. The rest is all keyboard. For games I prefer controllers and game pads so precision/high performance wasn’t an issue for me at all.
See e.g. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interbreeding_between_archaic_and_modern_humans
Corpses, illness, “bad genes” (asymmetry etc) seems like a more reasonable explaination in my ears, with interacting/breeding in mind.
Yeah, COBOL schools and boot camps have started to pop up
Over about a decade: Win7 -> Mint -> Manjaro -> Mint -> Endeavour
Eyeing Nix atm, looks cute, might hop later
Aaahhhhh the IBM System/360
Tidal waves are powered by lunar movements. We should join Luna’s p-tide movement for restroom equality. Come on. It’s funny. :)
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Haha. Nämen. Ang. personnummer och närliggande ämnen kan det vara intressant att läsa lite om Attribute-Based Credentials. Och ju fler som är överens om en generaldirektör desto mindre risk för korruption såklart. Det är nåt jag personligen tycker att vi ska sträva efter. Om du hellre ser majsodlingar och värmländskt självstyre så kör på det :)
I’m your shade, I’m your fire
I’m always in the mire
You know you wouldn’t want it any other wayyyyyy
I’m a birch, I’m a grower
I’m a sprout, I’m a tower
I’m a sinner, I’m a saint
I do not fear the rain
You mean Audacious, right?
Interesting. What did you listen to in your 30’s? Do you remember it as vividly as you do the music you listened to in your teenage years? Can you sing along the same way? How will the music you listen to now compare when you’re in your 50’s?
Not saying the music is objectively better or suitable for all points in life. Just pointing to studies saying teenagers have a huge emotional response to music. IIRC there have been studies showing dementia patients kind of wake up when you start playing music they listened to in their teens.
It’s “better = more suitable here and now” vs “better = more impactful” I guess.
The best songs we’ve ever heard are the ones we listened to as teenagers. You’ll never get a dopamine rush like that again.
Brain imaging studies show that our favorite songs stimulate the brain’s pleasure circuit, which releases an influx of dopamine, serotonin, oxytocin, and other neurochemicals that make us feel good. The more we like a song, the more we get treated to neurochemical bliss, flooding our brains with some of the same neurotransmitters that cocaine chases after.
Music lights these sparks of neural activity in everybody. But in young people, the spark turns into a fireworks show. Between the ages of 12 and 22, our brains undergo rapid neurological development—and the music we love during that decade seems to get wired into our lobes for good.
30+ here with the answer:
“Rocky montage” is a euphemism for the sex scenes in the film Brokeback Mountain, where one guy mounts the other in front of a rocky scenery.
I too was amazed by how much muscle is on the backside of the thigh when I first saw it:
https://piped.video/watch?v=WkAG-K0bIx4&t=50