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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/)LE
Posts
15
Comments
2,750
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I can't give specifics because it will depend on the version you play and also it's been a while and I don't remember all mods by heart. So it's just gonna be suggestions; in no particular order:

    • First of all you'll need the fundamental bug fixes. There's (still) lots of bugs in vanilla Skyrim.
    • You will need the new improved menus, most mods rely on them.
    • Personally I can't play without improving the aspect of PC and NPCs, so improvements to bodies, faces and hair are a must for me. If you get down the rabbit hole there's things like mustaches, beards, tattoos, eyes etc.
    • Armor and weapons is a close second for good looking stuff.
    • You will want a mod that improves polygons as well as something that enhances vegetation, skyboxes, water and weather.
    • There are mods that fill the cities and villages with a lot more... stuff. Things like decorative vegetation, benches etc. You will not be able to play without it once you've tried it.
    • The skill trees and the professions all need specific mods that apply balances and fixes. You can also go one step further and apply mods that actually make them interesting.
    • If you can find one for your version of Skyrim, I strongly recommend a mod that improves dragon AI and makes the fights actually challenging. It always seemed ridiculous to me how easy they are by default.
    • Better horses is a good idea, lots of convenience there.
    • Smithing improvements. Nuff said.
    • Personally I can't stand the default fighting in all aspects of it. I must have didn't roll and some extra brains for the enemies. Some mods the spruce up the dungeons aren't bad either.
    • You can get lots of extra quests and NPCs with Interesting NPCs.
    • I typically avoid shaders and ENBs in favor of simpler mods that let you adjust the game colors (contrast, saturation etc.) They have very low impact on performance and give you that color jolt that's 90% of why people use ENBs anyway.

    On an even more personal note, I like to play like a classic RPG. I get mods that allow multiple companions and interesting NPCs and when I met somebody interesting I take them into my party. There are also mods that let you order them better, you can adjust their flags to set what armor and weapons they prefer, how they level up, and whether they have "plot armor" so they can die for reals. I usually end the game with a party of 4-6 people and it's a blast. But you may want to adjust the difficulty accordingly as you go out you will start rolling everything.

    Another very interesting approach I've tried a couple of times is mods that remove all identification clues (no town names, no directions, maximum map fog of war) and start you in some random point of the map. Add some difficulty mods so you have to be really careful who you meet, perhaps some survival mods, and it's a real blast. You can also use rogue rules and restart when you die (and not save scum).

  • They're a very common form of personal backup. A few discs and an USB writer and you get a very long lasting medium for passwords, personal files, family photos etc.

    Can also archive multimedia of course, the smallest discs are 25 GB and can pack a few films, a season of a series, or a lot of music.

    • What does "authentication" mean if there's no server?
    • How do browsers behind NAT connect to each other?
    • How does it verify that the other chat partner is who they say they are?
    • Why use this and not Simplex?
  • SIMs are standalone embedded computers (they run Java!) that handle the cellular connections one their own and communicate with the phone over a standard pin-out and protocol.

    This way the phones are somewhat insulated from advances in cellular technology and it's one of the reasons mobile phones have been able to evolve so smoothly from feature phones to smart phones.

  • If you were 100% specific you would be effectively writing the code yourself. But you don't want that, so you're not 100% specific, so it makes up the difference. The result will include an unspecified percentage of code that does not fit what you wanted.

    It's like code Yahtzee, you keep re-rolling this dice and that dice but never quite manage to get the exact combination you need.

    There's an old saying about computers, they don't do what you want them to do, they do what you tell them to do. They can't do what you don't tell them to do.

  • Contact support and tell them how many you need and they'll try to accommodate you. There were a lot of people abusing the service and hosting hundreds of domains so now they're making everybody request them explicitly unfortunately. They've also had to suspend their .dedyn.io DDNS service indefinitely because of the abuse.

    That's why we can't have nice things.

    Please read up on DNSSEC because you will be required to turn it on for every domain you host with them.

  • I beg to differ. In my country (Europe) they can get almost nothing on their own (if I haven't volunteered it on social media). Public institutions, schools, banks, the police etc. do not release information to random people.

    When we have the odd American client that insists on hiring a background check they come to me to give them paperwork that proves education, past employees and (lack of) criminal history. Then they start bitching that they can't get in-depth information about each of them and I tell them to fuck off.

    I'm curious what exactly they're trying to get, maybe you can offer some insight. With the stuff I give them they are able to confirm that I really went to that school and worked at those places, should that not be enough?