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faried nawaz | @fn@p.node.pk

coffee

are there plans to put out a new release, @husky?

@mdhughes @hopeless coincidentally, my brother recently wrote:

At work, my 2016 MacBook Pro was connected to two 32in 4K monitors. My current one is from early 2020 and I have the same monitor setup.

he was confused by intel’s ads, and didn’t know about the m1’s limitation: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLk2sjg_-F-MfQL0aUbKyDX909ZfKCUq1c

Life After Death Metal

For people who have spent their youth touring the world in death metal bands, trying to transition to normalcy is where things get tough.

@ceejbot if you were in emacs…

Punch, brothers! punch with care! Punch in the presence of the passenjare!

excerpted from a dilbert cartoon.

wally: a deep understanding of reality is exactly the same as laziness.  asok: that can't be right.  wally: have you ever seen a statue of buddha jogging?

when do the leaves return?

a leafless tree in a park

Chessformer is a grid-based puzzle platformer with Chess pieces. Each of the pieces moves as expected, but they fall down after moving and can’t move again until they stop falling.

HTML5 game, free.

afternoon tea #z50

download utopia p2p
graffiti on a wall: download utopia p2p

@calculsoberic you have to verify your website (or blog, or reddit account, or whatever), and people can send you BAT that way.

@calculsoberic a few from viewing ads, none from tips.

@calculsoberic brave, which is based on chromium.

The German sociologist Gerd-Günter Voss has outlined the development, over many centuries, of three forms of the “conduct of life.” The first is the traditional: in this model your life takes the form that the lives of people in your culture and class have always taken, at least for as long as anyone remembers. The key values in the traditional conduct of life are “security and regularity.” The second model is the strategic: people who follow this model have clear goals in mind (first, to get into an elite university; later, to become a radiologist or own their own company or retire at fifty) and form a detailed strategic plan to achieve those goals. But, Voss suggests, those two, while still present in various parts of the world, are increasingly being displaced by a third model for the conduct of life: the situational.

The situational model has arisen in recent social orders that are unprecedentedly dynamic and fluid. People are less likely to plan to be radiologists when they hear that radiologists may be replaced by computers. They are less likely to plan to own a company when whatever business they’re inclined toward may not exist in a decade, or may undergo some kind of transformation we can’t currently anticipate. They are less likely to plan to have children when they don’t know what kind of world (in terms of climate as well as society and technology) they will be raising those children in. They might not even want to plan to have dinner with a friend a week from Friday, because who knows what better options might turn up between now and then?

Though the situational conduct of life is clearly distinct from the strategic model, it’s a kind of strategy all the same: a way of coping with social acceleration. But it’s also, or threatens to be, a kind of abandonment of serious reflection on what makes life good. It’s a principled refusal to ask, with Horace, “Where is it virtue comes from, is it from books?” or “What is the way to become a friend to yourself?” You end up just managing the moment. Therefore you certainly won’t ask whether your life will be driven by “hope and fear about trivial things, / In anxious alternation in your mind”—because what else could possibly drive it?.

— Alan Jacobs, Breaking bread with the dead: a reader’s guide to a more tranquil mind

@feld @rune https://seasonal-hours-clock.netlify.app/

https://github.com/cinnamon-bun/seasonal-hours-clock/tree/main/

It assigns a short name to each UTC hour to help you coordinate with remote people. It uses the conceit of squishing the 4 seasons of the year into the 24 hours of a single day

@lain stellar, maybe?

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