Oh, hides as in 'secretly places them' rather than 'removes'.
peto
The persistent issue with a lot of the exploration into supernatural claims is that the science was often middling quality and the people conducting the experiments were if not actually motivated to find positive results, not well equipped to spot positive deception.
You'd think spies would be, but any look into the history of espionage shows that they are plenty fallible.
And there generally is, most libraries have a catalogue or at least a directory explaining the numbering system at a topic level. Thing is, this sign doesn't just help people come to the library wanting help with these things. It helps people in the library who are experiencing this and didn't know they could find a book to help them.
Hell some people don't even know they need help with these things until someone offers.
So normally you could test this on something you both know exists and have the location of...
Does that mean the CIA actually do have the ark in a secret warehouse in the care of top men?
Honestly if you can already touchtype an ortho isn't going to be that big a learning curve. At least for me (going to an ortho with strong stagger), it finally meant that the keys felt like they were in the right place. I don't think the benefits of other layouts are quite as big if the keyboard actually fits your bone structure.
If you are going to a cut size layout, it's better to add in features incrementally onto something you already know rather than having to learn colemak and layers and thumb clusters.
If you have the time of course to re-learn how to type sure, do it all at once, but any time you spend on another layout (like, say, in the office) is going to make the transition harder. And as I said, layouts designed to make typing on a normal keyboard better make less sense on an ergo.
Should Vale release a general Steam OS and folk move away from Windows en masse it's probably going to be worth it. Proton does a great job but a tested and supported Linux build will be better. Some solos do it, but I think it is more based in ideology rather than necessity.
Your time and effort as a solo is going to be limited though, testing and supporting a Linux build is going to be work, and if you want to keep things closed source you are not going to be able to leverage the community in the way open software does.
There might be steps you can take to be more compatible with Proton and/or Steam Deck, which probably would be a good idea, and give you much more effect for your time spend.
I only really associate HP with corporate machines, which they seem to work fine for. Don't really associate them with the gaming space. Of course them looking at it is probably a sign that the handheld market is about to really open up, which is a good thing I think.
And if they make a good product with neither their corporate bullshit or all the 'gamer style' gimmicks I anticipate from folk like Razer or Alienware.
What I'd really like though is something DIY, or at least Framework-like. A man can dream...
I get some good stouts and porters where I live, though in the city it's pretty much lager or IPA or macro.
They say worst but it clearly isn't a membrane.
These days I don't really run a system per se. I like a lightweight frame that I can patch other bits on to as I need them.
Whitehack, Dungeon Crawl Classics, Lamentations of the Flame Princess, and especially Pariah are all ones that had a significant impact on how I run games now. There are also several games outside the OSR space that have likewise influenced me heavily.
Though if I am evangelizing it will often be off the back of Cairn because then everyone can have a copy.
True. If the movement was called boycott facists, or even buy local I don't think there would be the same problem.
This always strikes me as trying to avoid cannibals by wearing barbeque sauce cologne.