“Expedite” as in “oh shit oh god oh fuck we assigned that to Steve in accounting and then laid him off and forgot about it”
Other accounts:
@subignition (dead?)
@subignition
“Expedite” as in “oh shit oh god oh fuck we assigned that to Steve in accounting and then laid him off and forgot about it”
That would seem to be a failure of your client’s or instance’s Markdown parsing. The link works correctly from Mbin.
Hope that artist sues.
Touch typing. Like I said I cannot find any reputable statistics. touchtypeit.co.uk claims “according to research” it’s less than 20%, but does not actually link any specific research. There are some other sites like it that are trying to sell you a product and list a low percentage, but I can’t find any actual studies or statistics
There is an issue on the Mbin repo asking for that as an option if you are or know a developer with free time
From the article:
Your eyes are your mouse when using the Vision Pro. When typing, you look at a virtual keyboard that hovers around, and can be moved and resized. When you’re looking at the right letter, tapping two fingers together works as a click.
So they were working backwards to determine the inputs based off of the observed eye motion.
I have a much less modern VR headset and you can definitely still type on a regular keyboard while you’re wearing it. You can’t see the keyboard though, so you need to be skilled enough to touch type. I can’t find any reliable-looking statistics on it with a quick search, but it seems like that is not a very common skill
On the contrary, I’ve had a USB cable last multiple phones before. I think the trick is to avoid using it when it’s plugged in as much as possible. Another common pitfall is that microfiber (pocket lint) can build up in the charging port over months and years, resulting in a poor connection. You can usually remove this by turning the phone off and using the tip of a wooden toothpick to gently scrape out the lint.
I definitely think they should include a cable in the box though.
that “virtual keyboard” sounds awful, glad the flaw was caught quickly lmao I would just use a regular keyboard while in the headset, but I suppose that doesn’t work for most people who need to look at it to type.
I like how you think. The fourth panel should be a fractal repetition of the whole meme
Well, I’m not an expert, but I don’t think they don’t experience it so much as their religion has trained them to rationalize it away quickly. I feel like this meme template sort of reflects this, and I think the anger you’d get from bringing the contradiction to light is primarily it
I suppose that means my original post was phrased incorrectly regardless
for some reason he’s viewed as the second coming of jesus fucking christ and I really don’t understand how the fuck those delusional religious folks managed to square that in their mind.
That’s the neat part, they don’t. Cognitive dissonance is one helluva drug
Amusing that aside from the GPU TFLOPS the rest of it is a slight improvement if at all
Can you please leave the whole “responding when you’re not the person who was asked” bit behind, thanks
Thank you! You may be relieved to know that the title change did federate!
autocorrect appears to have turned “wholesomememes” into “wholesomeness” in your title
Eliminating bullshit on the costs side of the equation is also important work that should be done.
It’s worth noting that profit margins for farmers are a LOT thinner on average than the limits I spitballed above. You can’t quite get from raw prices to profit margins directly, but the further away you get from the farmers, the more bullshit there seems to be.
Profit limits of 10-20% across all sorts of essential industries would be good, I think.
Have some kind of progressive tax incentive where if your profit comes in under the limit you get a tax credit, and if your profit is over the limit you pay higher and higher taxes until it’s quickly not worth it anymore.
I don’t know the details, but some system where responsible businesses are better off overall than exploitative ones…
How did you take away “they were asking about Mastodon” when the question mentioned bluesky first? OP was asking for a comparison of the two, which your link does not provide, putting your answer somewhere between unhelpful and irrelevant.
You keep arguing with people pointing this out as if your response was a complete answer… It seems like you cherry picked the middle of their question and ignored the rest. The more-generous interpretation of this scenario is that your reading comprehension sucks. That’s my point.
And if you’re really feeling so insulted by my pointing that out,
Dude, grow up.
edit: and it would have taken such a small additional effort to maybe clarify that you were only addressing part of the question instead of dropping a link with no explanation. You could’ve prevented a lot of confusion by being a little less lazy in your original reply.
well, if whatever code automatically turns plaintext links into hyperlinks isn’t Markdown related, then it’s still the instance or client you’re using that has the problem. before they edited the trailing space in, it was working correctly on my end. You should consider looking into it and filing a bug.