This mouse actually has Silly Little Guy (SLG) syndrome. It’s not fatal, but it is lifelong in most mice.
I’ve had a few pet mice, and some of them just like to have fun doing silly shit like this. I’ve seen them go really fast in a wheel, then hang on so they whip around on inertia, that guy also had SLG, but lived a full life.
I should mention that ARM for desktop has been slowly progressing for some time now prior to Apple, what I’m pointing at is renewed interest.
There’s probably a non-zero amount of interest as well from countries noticing that having America have essentially full control of the global processor supply might be bad for them, and companies like Microsoft responding with support that goes beyond only really supporting x86.
The recent uptick is probably the usual chasing of Apple’s recent products forming a current trend.
The M1 processors really showed how desktop ARM is completely viable. Even more than viable, it’s crazy power efficient and still performs actually pretty great.
Unfortunately, I think as usual few companies will really attain as much success as Apple did, but Apple also had been developing ARM chips in house for years for their mobile products.
Man your “practice” looks better than my final models lol
Just realized this is BDG, so nevermind this is actually literally perfect.
Or is the problem that he’s wearing khaki instead of the canonical blue-Jean shorts?
Projected on a 2D screen, it’d look more like a normal venn diagram.
I want this specific update now. Actually so much better.
Yeah, but he’s also not the xkcd guy.
Day 1 wasn’t so bad, depending on approach. People got tripped up hard with replacing strings because of the old “twone.” If you didn’t happen to do string replacements it wasn’t so bad.
Day 3 absolutely wrecked me though - and my overall rank was still pretty significantly better than it had been on days 1 and 2.
I want part 2 like, yesterday. It’s such a good game, I’d play it day 1 no question.
I’ve been tinkering with Hyprland myself this week. Your layout looks pretty nice.
Yeah, I feel that man. Hopefully it doesn’t happen again though.
Ugh I had to get an obscure PCIe card working a few years back and it was a huge pain. I believe I ended up having to find the broadcom chipset by model because the generic brand driver didn’t support it, then the arch repos didn’t have the driver for the model, and there were several aur packs available that I had to try one by one. And it was kernel module loaded, so each was a reboot.
Absolute hell of a time, probably about 5 years ago.
I’ve had this happen. I never did figure it out, personally. I distro hopped a bit and eventually ended up back on Arch and it didn’t happen again, so I guess it was a bugged install?
Journalctl might be a great friend here.
Especially a decade ago before archinstall
These days it is comparatively easy.
Dtolney, the author for serde, has a stupid amount of libraries that fit this.
Other than serde, he owns syn, thiserror, anyhow, and async-trait.
He’s practically the Atlas of the Rust ecosystem.
Oh yeah, definitely this. If it doesn’t break down in water, it won’t break down in the pipes.