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5 mo. ago

  • Ohhhh, no no. The raids and dungeons are challenging and ridiculously hard. I get what you're saying now. It hasn't been like that since I started up again, which was right when Gundabad released. It's very easy to solo, and now there's an NPC that lets you change world difficulty if you want to opt for it, making it so that the hardcore players and the casual players both get what they want.

    I hear you. I haven't touched it in a while because I will literally lose months of my life to it. Its harder for me because its one of my gf's favorite games and when she plays I can't help but play.

  • I've learned to tolerate dripper coffee, but I'll never drink the swill that comes from single use cup coffee ever again. Tastes like licking a cigarette ash tray. However, I'm an Aeropress user and I receive judgement as much as I dish it out. Pour over is my next step, but I also want to get into using a moka pot.

    I also wish I had a better grinder than a Hario Skerton Pro, but it really is the best for the budget if you avoid the generic soft aluminum grinders that break way too easily. I will say that the Skerton Pro is a workout when grinding to something like espresso or Aeropress fineness though, but the ceramic burr is decent so far.

  • I absolutely love LOTRO, too. I understand what you mean. The endgame content is pretty advanced, but I had this conversation with someone on Reddit years ago.

    It doesn't have to be hard. There is so much content in LOTRO to last you years of playing new classes and enjoying the world. Throw out all of your max level up items, they're going to ruin the game for you. Just go out adventuring. I've had a good time during anniversary helping people through old dungeons (I hate you, Saruman).

    The endgame is hard, because half the community beats endgame and complains that there's no content, and half the community just plays casually. They don't really have the power to keep pushing out quantity in content, so they have to make ridiculously hard and rewarding content to make up for it. It's really a lose-lose either way, and they chose to keep the community that has been faithful for years over trying to pull in new players.

    It sucks, I agree, but I think I would have made the same choice. I still love playing and wandering around; leveling new classes, and you can now get new titles for playing new difficulty modes they made. You can change the world difficulty starting at level 10, I believe.

  • Oooh. I can have my Breath of the Wild time of day wallpapers again? I had something setup on Windows where three wallpapers (BotW landcape day, night, and sunset/rise) would change five times a day depending on the time.

  • Hopefully the day comes soon when we can just leave Windows behind altogether. I wouldn't be surprised if they ruin dualboot on purpose with every update.

  • I still love Lord of the Rings Online. It still has enough people to feel alive, to the point where they even upgraded their servers recently, and still keeps that old school feel. You can even earn LOTRO points through hunting monsters and quests, so if you put the work in you don't even need to buy anything.

    Do I miss the days before MTX? Yeah, but I feel like they are fairly less greedy about it than other games. Fairly. There's still the VIP subscription while double-dipping into MTX that rubs me the wrong way a bit, but they still actively try to listen to the players. I'll be sad when its gone...

    Its mostly much older generations that play, though, but that really cuts down on a lot of the toxicity. I've had so many polite conversations in world chat with programmers and sysadmins offering advice. One of the most helpful players I met was a 72 year old vietnam veteran. He helped me get started and gave me a ton of gear just for having a nice talk with him.

  • I used to use the Ubuntu Font until I found the glory of Recursive.

    Knock knock. Do you have a moment to talk about Recursive font? What about the weighted Recursive Duotone Nerd Font that makes bold and commented sections casual font?

  • Godless heathen here.

  • Yeah, but what's more feasible? Uniting a complacent society and not knowing when or where your next meal will be, or taking a hot check home and living comfortably? Especially when kids come into the mix. Why do you think they want to push the "have kids" and anti-abortion agenda? Because you're only going to think about the best for your family and the best is stability and peace when it comes to children.

    I don't disagree with you, but I don't condemn the little people trying to survive, either.

  • Not to mention it actually does happen by birth very rarely. Latent genetic traits can pop up generations later.

  • Ich habe vier Jahre auf Deutsch gelernt, aber mein Deutsch ist sehr schlecht.

    Honestly, I couldn't even remember if Deutsch was feminine, masculine, or neuter... but my pronunciation has always been spot on at least. I should just pick it back up, it'd be mostly vocab grind for me at this point. But I last learned years and years ago... dang, almost 18 years now.

  • Yeah, I was just thinking this needs a lot more upfront info. I mean, kudos for the site that harkens back to the 90's infomercial era and keeping it comfortable for those generations, but a page with some specs and actual info would go nicely with that.

  • I mean, I just plug the drive in once every week or so, move any new personal, irreplaceable files to the drive via whichever file manager I fancy at the time, and then set it aside for next backup.

    There's no replacement for physically backing up your data. Automation can even be the cause of file loss. Take it from someone who has spent days recovering their files via disk recovery tools.

    External drives are camping kits for PCs. If you have one, then it doesn't matter if you lose your system, just reinstall or install something new, open your camping kit and make camp. Make a dotfiles repository if you want to save your home and app configs.

    Windows and Mac is like a long term home ownership with a car, kids, partner, and too many bills to be free again. Linux is a nomad life. Nothing is for certain and you could lose your tent in a thunderstorm if you don't stake it down properly.

    Also, Timeshift is a very rudimentary and first-layer protection. Something that got configured wrong could have been configured wrong months ago and you may not have caught it at the time and all the restore points you've kept could have the same problem.

  • I'm not trying to be mean here, but if I'm reading the meaning of this post correctly, it feels like you really haven't dived that far into open source. There are thousands of FOSS projects that do exactly as you say, and yes, some get branded and bloated.

    But like... that doesn't mean that what is out there needs to strip away anything. It just means that you have to keep looking and possibly contributing even if its just reporting bugs.

    For example, Firefox. Have you even checked around? Falkon, Qutebrowser, Ladybird (still in alpha), Nyxt; there's a handful of QTWebEngine browsers already doing just fine. Not to mention the plethora of stripped down Firefox forks for both desktop and Android like Fennec, Ironfox, Floorp, Firedragon, and Zen. There's also a stripped down base Chromium browser, which I believe is de-Googled.

    I'm just not quite sure what you want to achieve here.

  • Yeah, it really speaks volumes about the devs. It means that no matter how innocent the package may be or how long its been there, they still pick through it all multiple times to make sure their users are safe and happy.

    But RIP Deepin users. Tbh though, I've been hanging around Linux forums a while and still have yet to see someone who actually daily drives Deepin, lol.

  • There really wasn't a lot of ramp up to it but there were Discord screenshots of his toxic personality being put down in r/feedthebeast at the time and (iirc) one of the devs that actually did do work on the project quoted the whole "poly" thing. Dunno if there was a screen of it, though.

    But even before that, there was apparently some horrible stuff that MultiMC did that resulted in PolyMC and other forks in the first place. That whole application has a shady past, tbh.

    I'm just trying to say, use Hyprland if you like Hyprland. There WILL be a fork of it someday. That is always guaranteed to happen when a dev becomes a piece of shit. Its all about when it is going to happen, but by all means move over to the fork when it does.

    As long as its open source and money does not change hands, you are in no way directly supporting a fascist dev. Once that software is on your PC that software is yours to do what you want with it, not the dev's. By all means, design your Hyprland as pro-trans with trans flag colors. I endorse that wholeheartedly, in fact. 🏳️‍⚧️

    I just don't like when people get auto-labeled for something they use or do. Its basic stereotyping and it drives me nuts. A lot of people just don't want to give the benefit of the doubt to others before even getting to know them. Getting branded because of a piece of software you enjoy is just... its up there, at any rate. I really can't put words to how frustrated it makes me. I don't even use Hyprland (I did try it, though). I run KDE because I'm a dirty mouse user. I'm much too smoothbrain for a tiling WM.

  • So that's what it means to think outside the box. I've always wondered.

  • Absolutely this. Too many people think that because you use some open source software from some fascist dev that "obviously you're fascist, too".

    Bigotry: obstinate or unreasonable attachment to a belief, opinion, or faction, in particular prejudice against a person or people on the basis of their membership of a particular group.

    Hating on Hyprland users that know what's going on but still really like the software fits this definition. Plus, isn't the biggest kick in the face having the exact people you hate use and enjoy your software?

    This is exactly why I switched from PolyMC to Prism Launcher. The PolyMC dev was a fascist prick and an anti-gay/trans activist. His fear was that PolyMC was "going to get taken over by the gays due to the name having Poly in it (as in polysexual)", so he started banning all the devs who disagreed with him or even made a joke about it.

    Those devs forked the project and, to rub salt in the wound, made the icon rainbow. But guess what? Its the same software. They forked it because they still liked it and wanted to use it. The software itself had absolutely nothing to do with the dev.