It’s tribal yet futuristic.
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herrvogel@lemmy.worldto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•If they're wet farts would the suit eventually start to rust?
1·7 days agoSome of them actually have active air circulation, with small battery powered fans and whatnot. I doubt a medieval knight had that, though I am not a medieval armorologistician.
It really makes no real difference for everyday use. The higher resolution of the scale is not relevant at all for deciding what to wear outside. It takes no time at all for your brain to adjust to either one of them. 38 becomes no different to you than a nice round 100.
In my opinion C and F are equally good for everyday use. Neither is better than the other. Although C is more “scientific” than F, it’s still a very much arbitrary scale at the end of the day. Knowing water freezes at 0C is not different at all than knowing it freezes at 32F for the purposes of knowing you might have ice on the road. Knowing 35C is hot weather is no different than 100F. The human mind can adapt to each of them just as easily as the other. Neither of them makes your life harder or easier than the other.
herrvogel@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•Why is Greg, Pastor of the Promised End playing guitar???English
2·11 days agoIt’s just alright liminal imo.
herrvogel@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Biggest Competitor for Amazon Kindle - Kobo - has formed an official Cooperation with iFixit for repair kits & guidesEnglish
8·13 days agoBecause calibre also allows me to convert other formats into epub.
Some files are unreadable garbage because of bad OCR or bad formatting or whatever. I use calibre to preview files in its built-in viewer, to see how they would be rendered on my actual reader. Helps a ton.
Some files have messed up metadata. Calibre helps with fixing that. I have encountered files that would appear as documents on my Kindle rather than books, for example. Easy fix with calibre.
Even if it is not messed up per se, I still sometimes use calibre to sometimes edit metadata to tidy them up. So that the author information between different books of the same series is the same, for example. “Banks, Iain M.” for all the Culture books, rather than a wild mess of various different variations of the same name. I have also added missing pieces of information to help group books in my library etc.
It’s a super useful tool. I just wish it didn’t spam so many system notifications though.
My 11 year old kindle is still going strong. The secret is never having disabled airplane mode even once since I first got it.
I don’t understand what American cars have to do with this photo. The only American vehicle in that UK parking lot is the white Tesla in the background to the right.
herrvogel@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•Forza Horizon 6's Japan map is the series' best yetEnglish
3·24 days agoI understand the game is not, and never was, story focused. But that doesn’t mean it needs to have the absolute worst, most insufferable dialogue ever written by man. It was so impressively bad in FH5 that turning dialogue volume down to 0 was a very common suggestion to improve the overall experience. If you’re gonna write such low quality dialogue for a game that doesn’t really need it, and then have it voiced over with the absolute worst direction possible so it sounds even worse then it is, then you might as well just leave it out. Nobody’s gonna miss it.
herrvogel@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.world•Linux 7.1 Expected To Begin Removing i486 CPU SupportEnglish
9·28 days agoI believe you.
herrvogel@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.world•Linux 7.1 Expected To Begin Removing i486 CPU SupportEnglish
8·28 days agoHow many of those are getting continuously updated to the latest mainline kernel though?
herrvogel@lemmy.worldto
Mildly Interesting@lemmy.world•A Starlink satellite broke apart in orbit after suffering an unexplained "anomaly"
1·1 month agoIt’s not easier to that on the ground. Those analyses are done by large radars slapped on top of satellites. They can scan huge tracts of land in very quickly with very high precision. More precise than airborne systems. They work regardless of the weather. The same satellites can keep track of river flows, forest growths, volcanic and tectonic activity, floods, structures like bridges, whole bunch of things. They can be used for extremely accurate mapping. They are insanely useful tools.
herrvogel@lemmy.worldto
Mildly Interesting@lemmy.world•A Starlink satellite broke apart in orbit after suffering an unexplained "anomaly"
2·1 month agoThey’re in such a low orbit that they’re barely staying in space already. You could explode all Starlink satellites right now and all their debris would naturally fall back into the atmosphere and leave the orbit clean in just a few years at most.
I stopped doing frontend work when responsive design became important. Super unpleasant work. Now I’m happier at the backend where I don’t have to worry about how my shit looks on the 7 million possible screen sizes people are likely to use. Life is more peaceful here.



I somewhat regularly drive through traffic that naturally flows faster than the speed limit. Those are hardly ever the drivers’ fault imo. The physical construction of the road should match its intended speed limit. You can’t build a long straight stretch of 3 lane road with no exits and merges, and still expect the people to stick to a 70kmh limit. The traffic will naturally flow faster than that if the road makes it too easy to exceed it. Those roads are usually intentionally made like that to be honeypots for the police anyway, at least that’s what I suspect.
Anyway, if my car was made unable to keep up with that, I’d be impeding the flow. That’s never very safe.