On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a human.

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 8th, 2023

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  • It souds like this is literally your first step outside of windows.

    Don’t listen to any of these people, stick to dual boot, especially if your quality of life (I mean your hobbies) are tied to mastery of a known ecosystem of specific softwares.

    Linux can work but you will need to compromise, and you will royally fuck up and unless you are embracing troubleshooting as an hobby you won’t like it.

    Dual booting allows you to have a safe harbor for when things go south.

    I’ve had a dual boot for around 6 years and only this year I have, not deleted windows but set up my boot to default to linux (it used to be last OS booted).

    I had to give up the quality of some audio filters for streaming, I coud not for the life of me figure out how to run a couple of specific games, I’m unable to uncompress big .exe archives (yarrr) in certain specific disks and after a year of smooth daily sailing I had my drivers go nuts and had to dive in and fix it, doing research on old shitty reliable windows.




  • Wait it’s all models? Always has been.

    It’s kinetic energy, temperature itself is not a real thing, you are dealing with the bonds that keep water molecules together, if you wiggle hard enought, with enough energy (so… fast enough?) you break free.

    I guess another way to look at it is the cloud of elecrons getting more and more messy, so that it destabilizes the bonds…


  • I think it’s much easier and truthful to stop talking about temperature and introduce speed in that context.

    The average speed is what we percieve as temperature, but single molecules can be fast, so fast as to break the boundaries of the liquid pool and shoot up toward space.

    Single unbounded molecules are what gas is.




  • Let’s simplify the “riddle”.

    It states: a number is 1 plus half that number.

    What is a quantity that added to “half a number” gives the number? What do you add to 0,5 to make 1?

    The other half.

    So we go back to the original statement: “a number is 1 plus half that number” and change it to “a number is half that number plus half that number”.

    If you go back and forth between the two you may notice that one the one side there is “1” and on the other “half that number”.

    $1 is half the cost, what is the total cost?

    We leave the last step to the readers.