Similar answer to a different question.
Something that I liked at first but now dislike.
Decades ago (stone cold sober no less) I really liked Pink Floyd.
Now I just find it difficult to sit through. I want something a bit faster pace.
What’s crazy is that I loved the steam world titles (quest and build were ok).
But I didn’t even know Heist 2 came out. I’ve already wishlisted it for later.
There was something in the manual if I remember correctly. Which you wouldn’t necessarily have if you rented the game.
Edit: just checked and I was wrong. Nothing in the manual. I must have been thinking of another game.
I used to be an avid reader but as I got older and busier I just couldn’t find the time.
Then when I did have time there was always distractions, or other things I could be doing.
So now I read primarily via audiobooks through Libby and my library.
I read 130 books or so last year that way.
Mowing the yard? Audiobook.
Long drive? Audiobook.
Waiting at the doctors? Audiobook.
Dishes? Audiobook.
And then when I’m really invested I’ll relax by playing some mindless game while I listen. Think match 3 or bejeweled.
Just engaging enough to keep me from getting bored while listening but not so much that I can’t do both.
Balatro, BABA is you? Bad candidates for playing and listening.
The last couple of years I burned through the wheel of time series, all of Brandon Sanderson’s books (except skyward which I haven’t gotten to), a lot of Adrian Tchaikovsky, and others.
Considering how we use it. It is absolutely fascinating. Same for magnetism
Keep it floating… other than that useful for makeshift spears/weapons for fishing?
This tip brought to you by the Tetanus and Sepsis better health council
Speed tape. Very expensive but basically helps with drag and isn’t structural.
Journey is good.
Rime is a good (but emotional) story.
Right. And if you’re going to do it at least do it right.
At least make his tie grumpy cat, or Harambe.
Wouldn’t this be equally offset by the increase in inertia from their masses?
Looks like a doable design for 3d printing. Assuming you don’t mind having plastic digging into your feet.
Looks like they actually do make some of these weird designs. Hilarious.
One thing to consider. When the stocks that are part of a mutual fund drop… then your retirement contributions will be buying them on sale.
Assuming the mutual funds are spread out to minimize risk (1 of the funds companies folds, etc) overall you’ll be better off long term.
As you age you’ll start moving your investments to more stable options (talk to a financial adviser on the specifics for your plans). This way they that won’t benefit from huge gains but also are a lot less likely to be wiped out by massive drops.
In the meantime look at how your funds are doing over time. Not even year to year but maybe every 2 or 3 years.
And the rest is standard UI conventions. Some of which have been in place since the 90’s.
Old Windows UX guideline documents for those who may be curious.
https://ics.uci.edu/~kobsa/courses/ICS104/course-notes/Microsoft_WindowsGuidelines.pdf
I don’t work with telescopes but I do know that hinges never fold perfectly along a plane.
There’s always a little twist/pivot which would probably be an issue with aligning the light in a setup like this.
Or the end key which goes to the end of a any line in any text editor in windows
Sounds like the perfect thing to test and iterate and then use that to have something machined in metal.
Of course with some stronger materials it may be fine. But how resilient will the belts be from the tension/stress and is there any risk of injury when they snap?
Geordi’s Tip: Use a separate Holodeck for … personal things… to avoid embarrassing situations.