Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)OP
Posts
7
Comments
196
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • It's not just that... The backgrounds and animations are just so oddly barren. Like, "Link to the past" and later pixel art games such as secret of mana made such great use of the limited resources they had. You could see how people had passionately worked in those. This one? Have you seen the walkcycle? The empty landscape with a few sprites thrown in? Sorry, but this is weird. Yeah, especially regarding the contrast to the cinematic.

  • Common sense? Certainly not. I never do that. I just add people as they come to my mind. Sometimes I order by how important the mail might be for them (which is roughly the same thing, usually). If I had to work in an environment where people are so self-absorbed that they determine their worth from the order of the names in the carbon copy recipients list of an email, I'd look for another place to work in.

  • Yeah. Some time ago I stumbled across a thread by an adult who got circumcised and was shocked that he could no longer easily masturbate without lube. So, that old dude being super weird with his views on sexuality and his larger influence on American culture might have played into OP having lost his foreskin indeed.

    Also just checked the Wikipedia page on John Harvey Kellogg and on the German one there's an entire chapter on his views on sex and masturbation and his weird obsession with enemas that seems to be missing from the English one. Odd.

  • Ha, good one... Watched that already though. Also doesn't really match this universal optimism. Over the garden wall was great but is to hilda what American McGee's Alice is to Disney's Alice, kind of. That world is morbid. Thanks for the recommendation though!

  • Hmmmm... Adventurous third person action game with a sense of mystery and strong scripting? Is that it?

    Horizon: zero dawn or forbidden west? That's more on the open world side of things though.

    What about God of war or maybe shadow of the colossus?

    A little shorter and not so much on the adventure side but very mysterious and very intense: hellblade - senua's sacrifice. That's quite dark though, missing some of those feelgood indy vibes.

  • Oooh, this is great!

    I love Hilda. The Netflix series. It has this feeling of adventure, an ubiquitous optimism and (and this is where it really gets difficult) combines this with a mixture of fast and slow pacing and (almost) traditional 2d animation. I haven't found anything similar. Friends recommended gravity falls and adventure time, but I didn't really like the faster pacing and American slapstick humour. The only thing that really ever came close was the ghibli adaptation of Ronja, which had this off-putting uncanny 3d cell shaded look of the characters but which I still enjoyed due to the writing (but which has disappeared from streaming services in Europe since).

    Hilda is kind of like star trek tng, with episodes being not too connected and the protagonists mastering their challenges without antagonising their adversaries or resorting to violence as the solution (the final movie being the exception here, which was really weird imho).

    And ideas?

  • Dude, calm down.

    I wasn't trying to be condescending. If a technician has looked into it then I guess there isn't much you can do. The issue usually not coming from copper cables was just supposed to maybe give you other ideas on where to look for an error. Like, maybe your router sharing its WiFi frequency with too many neighbours or something.

    Also, I'm not saying you should spend more money on mobile. I just don't think the pricing is as bad as it was ten years or so ago... Getting mobile broadband for 20 bucks is cheaper than most landlines and if the reception is decent it might be an alternative. If it isn't for you that's fair, too.

    If LibreOffice isn't an alternative then maybe try to run your office in wine? For things that aren't games the setup is usually manageable. If that doesn't work then maybe a VM might be a solution? I think most modern VMs offer modes where they keep the boot process of the guest OS hidden and just show you a single window. Like, you get an office icon on your desktop in Linux and if you click it the system boots a windows wm that directly launches an office window but only shows you this window once it's there, which should seamlessly integrate into your Linux desktop. If you're a student I think there are cheap or free ways for you to get a windows license to try this, but it's been some time since I studied so don't take my word on this.

  • DSL doesn't do bandwidth sharing, so unless your provider's backbone is over capacity, the amount of users is not relevant to you. Certainly not the ones in your apartment complex.

    Mobile reception is hit or miss depending on your provider. Where I live, I have essentially no reception whatsoever on my work phone which has a Vodafone sim. My private one with a Telefonica sim is better but still bad with the phone usually getting 4g but with a bad signal, so Internet is decent but calls aren't too good when I'm not on my WiFi. My wife's Telekom sim on the other hand works perfectly, so maybe just try different providers? My wife's using congstar (Telekom's no frills brand) because she doesn't need 5g. We generally pay between 15 and 20 bucks per month for our contracts, which all have more bandwidth than we need (20gb for me), which I think is manageable and not unreasonable at all. How much do you pay?

  • Yeah, but it's still pretty much as good as it gets with the original. Like, this is ms office. It opens ms office files. Even if it doesn't do it as it did twenty years ago it can be pretty much considered the way it just looks now.

  • With mouse wheels and touch screens everywhere, I can't even remember the last time I wanted to drag a scroll bar. Even worse, I have faint memories of infinitely scrolling websites that just hated it when you dragged the scroll bar. What do you need that interaction for? I'm not judging, I'm just curious about the use case.