No man, it's a bonding experience. Loudly declare "LET 'M RIP" or "GOOD POOPIN' " to your neigbouring stalls to wish them good luck. A small pinkytoe touch for an extra boost of courage for the road ahead.
My band has a shared playlist of all the song covers we play. That way we can acces the songs easily and listen to them to practice.
A different band I'm in has an "inspiration" playlist where we put songs that inspire us in the genre we create music in. Anyone can add songs they have found in the wild.
I've made "songs you might like" playlists for friends. A collection of songs that particular person might like.
Genre/mood playlists. Yes, spotify/other services have this feature, but they will include many songs you might not know/like. If you want a rock playlist with only your own rock music, make the playlist yourself!
Playlists are great for storing songs you found and you'll never rememeber otherwise. For example, I have a playlist called "awesome obscure" where I put all songs from artists I generally don't know. Say a friend sent a song, a song came on a spotify weekly list whatever. I also have a playlist called "nostalgia" where I store all my old time favorites. If I remember a song from the past, I put it there so I don't have to think so hard if I want a hit of my personal nostalgia.
Listening to (good) songs multiple times actually makes me appreciate songs more.
Having the playlist not set to randomize can actually also be a great way to set expectations/an experience on what comes next. I'm a shuffle guy myself, but I could see handpicking moods to chain together. Say (for example) you start with some slow songs to wake up, but the playlist gradually increase in tempo and vibes to wake you up. It could be a routine thing.
Playlists don't have to be a few songs long, they can have hundreds, or thousands of songs. They don't lose their punch if it takes 30 hours to get through them.
So basically it's a personalized list of songs YOU want to keep together for any meriad of reasons.
After typing this message, I realized how much crap I have to deal with in Mint (with my specific setup, not saying everyone has the same experience or that Mint is bad for everyone). I just installed PopOS. It absolutely handles different screen resolutions better out of the box. The tiling feature is interesting, but I'll have to learn how to use it properly the coming weeks.
Overall, feels more sleek than Mint with the two hours I spent with it. Pop!_shop feels less cluttered with random repos than Mints Software manager. Where Mint out of the box feels like Windows 7 with a theme that sort of works but sort of feels unfinished and dated, PopOS feels more like OSX. This comes with less customizability on the looks, but atleast stuff that has a place on your screen looks right and has the right amount of padding.
Time will tell if this is the distro for me, or if I'll be a distrohopper for life until I eventually land on Arch for the bragging rights.
Not a doctor, but I believe people should be careful with selfmedicating melatonine. Each person needs a different amount and at different times to make it effective. Too much melatonine can actually make you sleepy during daytime, or have an adverse effect on sleep. Get help from a sleeping expert on whether this is right for you.
My experience with Mint the last 8 weeks has been... mixed.
My biggesst issues:
-It handles two monitors with different resolutions poorly. I settled on accepting that one screen has just bigger UI now. There is an experimental setting that allows individual scaling per screen, but some apps don't seem to use the systemwide scaling. It basically creates more problems than it solves.
-Dark mode is random. Some apps don't support dark mode, but Mint still forces light fonts. Which makes those fonts unreadable on the light backgrounds.
-Window management is... weird with two monitors. If you have your screens setup in a certain way, windows will appear partly off screen,aking them undraggable or closable. Some windows you can just WIN+arrow but some popups don't allow that.
Permissions can be a pain in the buttocks. Some flatpaks don't give the right permissions, so you'll be googling and sudo'ing your ass off at times. How can a flatpak for Arduino NOT give permissions to use USB? Dafuq?
Also, any permissions outside your home folders can (out of the box) only be changed through commandline. Which makes it a pain to install, for example, fonts, unless you dig through the 6 font managers that software manager shows. 2 of those font managers don't have a gui, 1 can only install 1 font at a time, so after trying 3 programs you finally find one that works.
-Now that we talk about the software manager... It can be a pain to find the right stuff. Sometimes you search a program, and you'll find 7 versions because thank FOSS and all it's forks.
-Most documentation and questions are answered with using commandline. And sometimes, as a noob like me, you'll damage more with those answers than you'll solve.
I have had multiple OS wide hard freezes when unplugging USBs from an external USB hub. Only hard resetting the PC worked.
What I like so far:
-You can split the explorer in to two navigations. Super useful.
-you can fully customize your start menu and launch bar.
-the backup function is amazing
-most steam games work great
-it starts up rather quick
-it doesn't track me like Windows does.
Might try Pop OS soon, although I also accept that switching an OS can just take time to get used to. Took me a few months to get accustomed to OSX years ago when I had a Mac Mini for 6 years.
I've used Gimp all through my teenage years. And I used it a LOT. It was quite a difficult transition to Photoshop (which my workplace uses). But once I got the hang of photoshop, I realized how convoluted Gimp really is.
Half the time spent in Gimp is making backups before making an edit. A third of your layers will be backup layers in case you change your mind about a design decision. The whole design process is super inflexible and therefor kills creativity.
Want to use an effect like gaussian blur or drop shadow? Make sure you backup your layer!
Want to edit text after you stretched it all out? I hope you made a backup of that layer!
Want to work with large files with many layers? You better hit ctrl S after every edit, because the program just might crash on you if you make a difficult selection!
To be fair, I haven't used much Gimp since 2.8, so if stuff is different now: awesome!
And I admire all volunteers that work to make stuff better. But for now, I'll stay away from it if I need to do heavy editing.
I always wondered if I could contribute/volunteer to a FOSS somehow with some UIX stuff, but I don't even know where to start. Would you just draw a concept ui for the team to work out or something?
Not that I'm great at it, but man, we gotta start somewhere, right?
Yes exactly. I used Gimp extensively (i think 2.8?) back in the day, and especially text was a pain to work with. If you rotated or resized text, you couldn't change what the text said anymore.
Another example is making a layer grayscale. In gimp it would make the whole layer grayscale without any way to revert it. In Photoshop it sort of is like an extra "layer" on top of your colored layer that you can turn on and off, making it "non-destructive"
Nowadays I mainly use Illustrator for work, so I could indeed probably give Inscape a good try. But sometimes you just need to work with pixels and gimps destructive workflow is just a dealbreaker for me. Still, it's impressive that the team got it so far, and I hope one day it will do a Blender and become the powehouse it deserves to be.
No man, it's a bonding experience. Loudly declare "LET 'M RIP" or "GOOD POOPIN' " to your neigbouring stalls to wish them good luck. A small pinkytoe touch for an extra boost of courage for the road ahead.