Cascadia. Save the Whale wrote a song about this.
August27th
I suspect that SteamOS will be ready well in time for all of those computers that don't have a genuine upgrade path to Windows 11 in October. We may see yet another bump by this time next year.
That's a great yearbook quote for/from someone who ended up doing extraordinary things.
Of all the reviews, this was one of them.
Here is something I remember from 2 decades ago.
https://www.npr.org/2004/04/28/1861434/ben-jerrys-uses-sound-to-chill-ice-cream
They used sound to make standing waves that created areas of hot and cold, then somehow ejected the hot, keeping the cold. You'd just keep the hot and eject the cold instead.
Unless you are going to do something like Ben and Jerry's though, all you are going to be doing with your speaker idea, as far as I can see, is to try to induce friction heat via vibration, and possibly move air around. There are easier ways to make heat than that. You may also create mechanical fatigue in the material moving it back and forth so much in the attempt to make heat, which may negatively impact the performance of the material.
As for ultrasonic humidifiers, they work by exploiting water's ability to cavitate, as it is a liquid. If you can get plastic to cavitate somehow and emit only water vapor, without destroying the filament, that would be impressive!
A resistive heater is probably going to be a more effective means of drying filament. Personally I would just get an air fryer and run it in dehydrate mode, if I wanted to use a consumer device in an alternate manner
If you think that's bad, imagine for a moment that they are the only money in the whole system, then charge interest on the loans, and then fast forward to a time when all the loans resolve and everyone is paid back. It's actually impossible, because there's not enough money in the whole system to both pay back the loans and charge interest. You have to print money to make the system keep working, but doing so devalues the currency. To cover the loss of value, prices go up to compensate (inflation).
Word. I ran mine in the bathroom with the fan on for 90 minutes and that wasn't quite enough time.
What were the 1980s like compared to the 1970s? Unrelated to my last question, of all the decades you have experienced, which decade was the best/peak decade overall, in your opinion (and a little about why)?
This is going to be a super weird request for a handful of reasons, the first being that you already abandoned watching it, but for some reason I am just super curious what your review in particular would be if you watched the whole thing, just for the sake of it now that you've said that, and came back to tell us. Other reviews be damned, something about your reaction to it is interesting for some reason, which makes your opinion of it in full compelling, if you'd consider humoring us. I'm serious.
If you thoroughly enjoyed the show, you will be tickled by The Good Place: The Podcast. Mark Evan Jackson (Shawn) hosts it, and it's truly excellent. Lots of behind-the-scenes info from people who are truly dedicated to their craft. If you thought the characters were great, the people and writers behind them are even cooler, and you get to hear so much neat stuff about the show from them.
Michael Schur also wrote (an often hilarious) book called How to Be Perfect, about what he learned about philosophy from the research he did in order to write the show. If you get the audiobook version, parts are narrated by some of the actors from the show, and it's just a delight as a fan. I don't think anyone would become a philosophy expert from the book, but it's an introduction to it, and amusing to boot. A good book IMO.
What a world when you have to mod chip your bed.
As someone who builds and deploys software in the cloud all day, seeing the term "cloud native" used for a desktop OS just reads as jibberish to me, no offense. Nobody can seem to explain clearly in simple terms what is actually meant by it.
Does it just mean all of the compilation of binaries and subsequent packaging have all been designed and set up to run in a uniform build pipeline that can be executed in the cloud? Or is bazzite just basically RancherOS (RIP) but for the desktop? I am seeing people in this thread talking along the lines of both of these things, but they are not the same.
Can you explain what the term "cloud native" means as it relates to bazzite in a way that someone who can build Linux from scratch, understands CI/CD, and uses docker/kubernetes/whatever to deploy services in the cloud, could grok the term in short order?