How do you play for that long? After 500 hours every mission feels the same, even with mods.
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saturn57@lemmy.worldto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Social gatherings have been... different since I switched.
8·11 days agoI use a rolling release distro (void) and I haven’t had to touch my system configuration since I set it up 4 years ago.
Heresy! AmogOS should be S+ tier.
saturn57@lemmy.worldto
3DPrinting@lemmy.world•Washington wants your 3D printer to spy on you - here's the billEnglish
7·16 days agoUncommon Washington State L
What do you mean? Lasers have always pointed left.
deleted by creator
0 dollars is 0 dollars
saturn57@lemmy.worldto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Day 3 of documenting life in Daily Mail headline format
2·28 days agoReminds me of the crow lady from the Good Place.
I was referring to seeing an adult using a Chromebook in general. Of course I haven’t seen another adult use “the hub;” it’s not like people use it in public.
Who tf is accessing the hub on a chromebook? Never seen an adult use one, so I sure hope it isn’t teenagers on their school laptop . . .
You will however have a good deal easier time climbing the corporate ladder.
This you?

saturn57@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Op doesn't have time for interviews
1·1 month agoThe “right” solution doesn’t work. Each light switch can turn the lightbulb on by being up or being down. This means there is 3*2=6 possible cases of which light switch state turns on the light bulb. So we need to make 3 observations to bring it down to one case. An example of the original logic failing is that the light bulb being on could mean either that switch 2 being up turns it on, switch 1 being down turns it on, or switch 3 being down turn it on.
I present an alternative solution. Since the conventional solution says that we can feel its temperature, we know the light bulb is within reach. We can visit the room first, unplug the light bulb, and bring it back to the light switches. Then we can check all 2^3 permutations of light switches to see which one effects the bulb. Of course, it is likely that non affects it after unplugging it, but it could be a wireless light bulb.
The final minetest website feels like one giant schizo post. Sure, maybe this one almost never talked about project is leagues ahead of the mainstream project, but, given the absolute wall of text of crash out against the minetest devs, it’s probably just another mediocre fork made purely out of hate.
Ah yes, 1000 year old civilizations, famous for having modern high efficiency photovoltaics.
saturn57@lemmy.worldto
CartographyAnarchy@sh.itjust.works•My thoughts on Europe as an American
14·2 months agoAin’t no way the Balkans are in the same category as Sweden and Germany






Energy loss for wireless energy transmission is actually surprisingly low. Here is an example of 80% efficiency over 1 kilometer: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1123672