Web of trust
kogasa
Played for the first time a couple weeks ago. No significant bugs. Just a really excellent game, easily 9/10. Phantom Liberty might be a 10.
This has gotta be responsible for some awful mistreatment of alien gut fauna
I'm ok with accepting this as canon
Well yeah but that's not the problem. You can evidently encode sophisticated models and logic in those billions of parameters. It's just that determining and modifying what has been encoded is impossible.
I've been using Wayland for years so this sounded like good news. However this screen share implementation, along with Vesktop's, gives me unusable levels of lag which isn't present in the current Discord implementation. Lucky I guess.
It's (co)homology, not Cartesian algebra. There's also a typo in the meme. I have a fixed version and solution somewhere.
Yes, the egg needs to be barely cooked before battering and frying, which makes it really annoying to shell + batter + fry them
CSS is still used. Modern web toolkits like bootstrap and tailwind can reduce or eliminate the need to write CSS explicitly. Some tools like Sass extend CSS. They all generally produce regular CSS that gets read by the browser.
It's not all of Microsoft, you just can't download ISOs from their website.
I'm a hobbyist speed typer (200wpm+), generally prefer linear switches. I do bottom out almost always. To reduce the impact of bottoming out, if this is an issue for you, you can:
use a softer and/or more flexible plate. An aluminum or brass plate is very stiff and will absorb less of the impact compared to an FR4 or polycarbonate plate. The mounting style of the keyboard can also affect this, e.g. a gasket mount has the pcb "floating" on rubber pads that absorb shock, and a plate that is screwed directly into a metal chassis will absorb almost nothing. The plate/pcb can have flex cuts added to improve flexibility and absorb more shock.
use switch springs with a higher actuation force. Common choice is 63.5g or 68g, which is a little heavier than the Akko switches' ~45g. The spring can also have a variable profile such that the resistance increases more as the spring is depressed, so it kind of cushions the impact a tiny bit. I use extra long springs which has the opposite effect, the response curve is more constant.
use rubber o-rings on the switches. This will make them feel squishy and I don't really recommend it, but it's an option if replacing your keyboard isn't.
FWIW I mostly use an Odin75 keyboard with an FR4 plate and stock alpaca switches. This is gasket mount + soft plate with lots of flex cuts, so it's a reasonably soft typing experience.