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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/)KY
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  • This isn't really the case though. Obsidian uses a database for metadata, and therefore can extremely rapidly display, search, and find the correct file to open. It generally only opens a handful of files at a time.

    I've used obsidian notes repos with hundreds of thousands of notes with no discernable performance impact. Something LogSeq certainly couldn't do.

    The complaint in the post you've linked is a) anecdotal and b) about the import process itself getting slow, which makes sense as obsidian is extracting the metadata.

    I'll always champion OSS software over proprietary, but claiming this is a huge failing of the obsidian design is just completely false. A metadata database fronting a flat filesystem architecture is very robust.

    Edit: adding link to benchmark. https://www.goedel.io/p/interlude-obsidian-vs-100000

  • Every team does file complaints, but I feel like Horner and Toto are sort of infamous for frivolous accusations that make the other team tear their vehicles apart for inspection hoping they find something or don't and just forget a bolt somewhere.

    Point is, it should be a rule for everyone. If you make an accusation and it turns into nothing, we take a point off the constructors, or something to that effect. Penalize the principal without overly penalizing the driver's for the principal's soap opera antics.

  • Standard Horner BS. If someone is actually competing: complain about everything and try to get them penalized.

    Eventually F1 is going to have to implement penalties for frivolous investigations, like flopping penalties in other sports.

  • Eeeeee

    Jump
  • And because it always bears repeating;

    According to JPL’s Chief Engineer for Mission Operations and Science, Marc Rayman-

    Let's go to the largest size there is: the known universe. The radius of the universe is about 46 billion light years. Now let me ask (and answer!) a different question: How many digits of pi would we need to calculate the circumference of a circle with a radius of 46 billion light years to an accuracy equal to the diameter of a hydrogen atom, the simplest atom? It turns out that 37 decimal places (38 digits, including the number 3 to the left of the decimal point) would be quite sufficient.

  • Switches both look to be linear. Would you be happy with linear, or would you want tactile / clicky / silent etc?

    Also, no declaration of swappable switches, so you're likely stuck with them. For beginners I really recommend swappable switches or at minimum a switch tester to be sure you have some idea what you want before you commit.

    Keyboard is wireless, so no guarantee it will work on Linux, but most do flawlessly. Bluetooth interoperability nearly guaranteed.

    Materials look nice but I know nothing of the brand. Usually not recommended to stray too far off the beaten path while new to mechanical keyboards. Lots of junk out there.

    What about it is so attractive to you? The layout? Key caps? Some particular features? None of these look particularly unique.

  • If you ignore that one monolog and just accept that the extra-dimensional aliens/future human entities didn't understand how to communicate with his daughter using only gravity, so they captured her father and had him do it, it makes a lot more sense.

    And really that is what the script is trying to say... I think. It's just very ham-fisted and ranty which does happen in Nolen movies. Basically "these beings have all the power in the universe compared to us, but without knowing (loving) the person they're trying to reach they can't find a way to get the message across."

    Honestly in my head-cannon, the dude just went from self-sacrificing by falling into a black hole to looking at his daughter when she was trying to convince him not to leave. He's more than a little emotional and we can't expect him to make perfect sense.

  • FWIW, Lance buys the machines himself using his patron funds and doesn't let manufacturers into his process. Most don't even know they're being reviewed unless he has issues or specific questions he can't get the answers to elsewhere. He's frankly more qualified to test and compare such features than nearly anyone else, since he has thousands of hours of stick time with hundreds of machines at this point.

    To get back to the bulk of your question, in many other industries where water heating is done, there's cheap thermoblocks and good thermoblocks.

    Double boilers have been around long enough that improvements today are incremental at best. Heat Exchangers and Thermoblocks on the other hand seem to be improving by leaps and bounds still, and Thermoblocks in particular are getting a lot of development in other industries.

    It looks like Ascaso is using decent blocks and is properly PID controlling them. Obviously it's not going to be as stable as say a full brass double boiler, but the results seem to outperform most heat exchangers.

    Value is tricky though. You're right, it's a crowded market at that price. Personally at this moment, given this review at face value I'd still go with a Silvia Pro X today. But I expect in a few more years heat blocks might be able to match performance with dual boilers for cheaper and with less work.