They're not for everyone, but I love them. When it's warm enough, I really like the V-Aqua, because they have nice grip on wet rocks and I can comfortably climb in and out of the water without getting water logged (I think the movement of water is fascinating and like playing with the camera with it).
The other ones are nice, too, but do have to be washed more regularly because they absorb sweat and start to stink if you don't.
I have a couple pairs now of Vibram Five Fingers and they're the most comfortable shoes I own. My feet are pretty wide, so my choices tend to be "squash the fuck out of my little toe" or "wide but heavy as hell". I went barefoot places I could regularly (and still do camping when putting on shoes is too much for a short trip or whatever), but these let me do similar everywhere. I find hiking a lot easier when I can feel the ground and use my toes scrambling over rocks and in streams, etc.
Just cutting off the bottom of your shoes is dumb as hell.
Not everyone values the same things you do. Flatpaks aren't the cause of the fact that different applications don't function correctly with different versions of libraries; they're just the solution.
Flatpak is better for normal people. It's better for most advanced users who don't want to micromanage compatibility issues. And it really doesn't have an impact on people who do want to micromanage because all your alternative ways to install software are still there.
On the one hand, I think Sony's approach of not putting everything in the subscription library is a big part of how strong their library on the console as a whole is. Their games are worth buying.
On the other, CoD is the shoveled GaaS nonsense, and "everything we publish day one" has basically been their promise to subscribers from the start. It seems shitty to pull back on that now that they have a couple first party games that people actually want.
Not that it matters to me in reality. I'm not buying an XBOX or installing Windows. But it seems a little gross to abandon the whole premise they sold people on, especially when that was part of the reasonably tolerating perception of their acquisitions.
If you're open to dealing with emulation, both the new Zeldas pretty much fit the bill. There's combat but probably less than Skyrim.
Slime Rancher is one I enjoyed for a while that's definitely kid friendly. Supraland didn't really grab me, but in terms of being super tame and having varied stuff to explore it fits again.
If it specifically has to be houses/cities, none of those fit that well. But they have worlds that are varied and interesting.
Applications are obviously limited without developers having one, but the tooling is all there to interact with and modify your perception of objects in the real world. ARKit is already reasonably well tested with mobile. It's just more/better input and output.
The fact that the real world is passed as a low latency display doesn't make it not AR.
Top athletes are grossly underpaid. Basketball straight up truncates them. Giannis would make at least double on the open market. Football, the best players make the same as second and third tier players at their position, entirely dependent on when they hit FA.
But that's my point. Good chicken doesn't need seasoning.
If your chicken is bland, you're probably getting ones bred/raised for fast mass at all costs. Chicken broth is used for flavor in other dishes just as much as beef or pork is, because chicken can have plenty of flavor.
It also tends to be leaner and better for you, though. I eat my share of beef, pork, chicken, shrimp, and occasionally various fish. I'm not bashing any of them. But cheap beef and pork can be just as bland as cheap chicken. It's all about finding a reasonable source.
Chicken breasts from my grocery store are pretty bland, regardless of how I prepare them, because their source isn't good. If I get chicken breasts from Costco (they come vacuum sealed in their juices), I can oven bake with just some salt and olive oil and they're still really good.
But also, learn some spice blends (or find some). The same chicken and rice can provide a bunch of different feeling meals with different seasonings.
You could very easily just project the last bounce, and if it's going to go into the good spot, cheat and adjust the path, based on predetermined odds. It wouldn't be hard at all to turn a 1 in 7 chance if the physics would be uniformly distributed without cheating into 1 in 700.
They're not for everyone, but I love them. When it's warm enough, I really like the V-Aqua, because they have nice grip on wet rocks and I can comfortably climb in and out of the water without getting water logged (I think the movement of water is fascinating and like playing with the camera with it).
The other ones are nice, too, but do have to be washed more regularly because they absorb sweat and start to stink if you don't.