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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/)M
Posts
8
Comments
31
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • He's still a billionaire tho 🤮

  • Dude just try to be a little open minded to a potentially good thing.

    The entire process releases zero greenhouse gases, uses no farmland to feed cows, and despite its industrial appearance, has a significantly smaller footprint.

  • Oh, I took your original question more generically. You can use last.fm to provide you with recommendations in general according to what you listen to (after scrobbling your library for a while), but acquiring the recommendations (and/or integrating into your active playlist) is a whole other thing. I'm sure it's possible but I don't know of out of the box way. Might be a plugin or something out there for it somewhere. That's why the convenience of streaming can be pretty nice.

  • Last.fm, but pay the artists somehow, concerts, merch or imo one of the streaming platforms.

  • I dunno I like elden ring and rdr2. Some are still good, just not most, anymore

  • Yep. Imo now with Plex you are paying for a much simpler and accessible setup. Seems fair enough to me. Lemmy FOSS or die users (every else in this thread seemingly) are not the target audience of Plex but they sure love to complain about it.

  • I use it as a work journal and personal knowledge management (PKM). Each day I open a daily journal note (built from a template with an easy shortcut) that contain rough notes on what I did that day. From that note I link over to project notes for any project I worked on or complex issues, scratch notes, etc. I do split windows, one with a narrow view of the daily note and then a larger panel for content notes (like documenting the project or create a scratch note or searching for a note on a problem I had 2 years ago that I need to remember about). There are many useful plugins but Templater and "Various Complements" are my favorite. Templater allows me to configure a template for any note I want to configure, so I can create a new note then hit a shortcut that will prompt me for a page title and auto fill the note with my template (that includes tags, headings, etc) for a meeting or new project or scratch note. Templater can also organize the note and move it around on my filesystem. Various Complements plugin allows me to build a dictionary of anything I want that will then fill in like an IDE when I'm typing in a note. So I use it for all my coworker names, I type 4 letters of someone's name and it pops up suggestions where I can tab-complete their full name.

    It's truly a great program, better for me than all the others I've tried: OneNote, TiddlyWiki, DocuWiki, Dendron, and emacs. I used TiddlyWiki for years and had to bend it to my will in many wonky ways, then Obsidian came around and did 90% what I wanted out of the gate and the 3 or 4 plugins I use did the rest. I've been using it for a few years now.

  • Yeah and I guess you vote third party or not at all which also is a vote for trump. Or maybe you're not even in the US. Pie in the sky idealism is great but unless you're organizing and changing the system BEFORE a generationally crucial election, and you voted third party (aka for trump) then you are just as naive and you'll suffer along with everyone else for your ridiculous unrealistic ideals.

    Harris would not have doomed us all to climate change or borked the whole fed government (the consequences of which we're already seeing and will only get much worse in the coming months) and definitely wouldn't have blamed a plane crash on all non-white people with straight up Jim Crow era messaging. Your comment is disingenuous or severely misinformed.

  • And how do they still fucking suck at searching for files. I can't find shit without the Everything app

  • Removed Deleted

    Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Or you could dev up your own perfect solution and show them how easy it is to get funding to do it, show us all

  • This article is fucked up. No one (likely) here saw the 60 minutes opening, we're all reading about a huffpost article about the response from a bunch of people on Twitter, those might not even be Americans, they might have an IQ of 50, why are they driving the conversation? We're not taking the time to watch the 60 minutes and we're letting huffpost make money off of outrage culture. The content of the 60 minutes is the story and crucially important not the idiots/bots/propaganda responding to it. The shittiest type of journalism is based off Twitter replies and the best journalism is what 60 min is doing

  • That Bloomberg news interview probably did the same thing, I couldn't believe some of the garbage parts of the crowd were clapping at.

  • Lemmy sure loves a circlejerk about shitting on Firefox.

  • Look, another useful idiot

  • It's insane to me that he could even cash out, who out there even thinks the stock is worth anything, especially when trump starts selling . With my lack of knowledge about the stock market it makes no sense there would be anything on the buying side.

  • Nah, fuck that. Vote.

  • Today I Learned @lemmy.world

    TIL The fish pepper was thought to be extinct for much of the 20th century until the rediscovery of fifty year-old seeds in a family's freezer

    www.bbc.com /travel/article/20240216-the-us-pepper-that-was-nearly-lost
  • Today I Learned @lemmy.world

    TIL VH1's Pop Up Video is "lost media". Due to licensing issues, the only way that episodes can be found is through home recordings of the show from when it aired

    lostmediawiki.com /Pop_Up_Video_(partially_found_VH1_music_series;_1996-2012)
  • Today I Learned @lemmy.world

    TIL In the Hot Coffee lawsuit against McDonalds,punitive damages were given due to McDonalds intentionally overheating coffee to save money on refills

    www.poolelg.com /blog/the-truth-behind-the-mcdonald-s-hot-coffee-case-.cfm
  • Today I Learned @lemmy.world

    TIL The first recorded human death by robot was in 1979 when 25-year-old Ford Motor assembly line worker Robert William was struck by an arm of a malfunctioning one-ton robot

    www.wikiwand.com /en/Robert_Williams_(robot_fatality)
  • Today I Learned @lemmy.world

    TIL The Katy Freeway in Houston, TX was expanded in 2008 to 26 lanes (one of the widest in the world) and 5 years later had longer peak travel times than before the expansion

    www.nytimes.com /2023/01/06/us/widen-highways-traffic.html
  • Today I Learned @lemmy.world

    TIL The initial rate in 1866 for messages sent along transatlantic cable was $10 a word, with a ten word minimum.

    www.pbs.org /wgbh/americanexperience/features/cable-how-early-cable-was-used/
  • Today I Learned @lemmy.world

    TIL The first air conditioner was created not for cooling a room but to prevent humidity causing swelling pages and blurry prints in a printing press

    www.smithsonianmag.com /smithsonian-institution/unexpected-history-air-conditioner-180972108/
  • Today I Learned @lemmy.world

    TIL The name "flashlight" came from the first lights that could only briefly illuminate because the batteries couldn’t hold a charge for long periods of time

    blog.bulbhead.com /when-were-flashlights-invented/