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212
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • It's probably still perfectly safe to eat. It likely just tastes like hot garbage. Frozen food doesn't technically expire, it just slowly gets more and more freezer burnt that degrades the quality and taste. It remains perfectly safe to eat indefinitely, however.

  • That's friend's name? Jason Parsor

  • I've never actually played 1e or OD&D, i started in 2e. Still makes me old, though, for the record.

  • It's never really specified. They call him the "cavalier", which in 2e was a kit that either paladins or fighters could take. He occasionally did some sorta-paladiny stuff like when he bubbled with a force bubble type thing to protect his friends

  • Running arr services on a proxmox cluster to download to a device on the same network. I don’t think there would be any problems but wanted to see what changes need to be done.

    I'm essentially doing this with my set up. I have a box running proxmox and a separate networked nas device. There aren't really any changes, per se, other than pointing the *arr installs at the correct mounts. One thing to make note of, i would make sure that your download, processing, and final locations are all within the same mount point, so that you can take advantage of atomic moves.

  • I've always thought it sounds like a horror song as well, which is why my favorite version is by the Lovecraft historical society: Carol of the old ones

  • Alternatively

  • you got me.

  • I mean, this is still more or less what the fast charging standards do; they're pouring more power into it faster with higher bandwidth cables and sectioned charging.

    The level 3 fast charger is basically the equivalent of 4 power cords from your wall. Also, adding more and more hardware and things for it will effectively make the electronics more complicated, which means more expensive, difficult to manufacture and repair

    But also, as you scale this up more and more you'll start running into issues that make it difficult to start pulling more power; energy from the grid isn't infinite

  • This is already what they do. Dry batteries that are bigger than about your phone are generally comprised a whole lot of battery cells. If you ever take em apart, you'd basically see the cells are made up of what looks like a whole bunch of AA batteries (but larger).

    They do charge "in parallel", but that's limited by how much electricity you can feed through into the system as a whole, and doesn't speed up the process, it just makes them all fill at about the same rate.

    Making the cells swappable is basically what this video is about.

  • Also, I assume it's because the xml file in maven is typically called a "pom" file, so expanding that to pomni for some reason? It still doesn't make a ton of sense

  • As of java 21, you can actually just use:

    void main()

  • I appreciate your light touch on moderation, though I think you might want to have really basic rules e.g. no CP, to protect yourself as the apparent owner of the site.

    That's actually covered by rule 1 of the site rules.

    1. Don’t do anything illegal - anything against the law is basically prohibited here. We’d like to keep our instance relatively above board.
  • FWIW: Temp bans are frequently used as a "warning" both within lemmy moderation and on reddit. Not saying everywhere does it, but its a pretty common practice. I assume that's what the above ban was for, along with the note that was basically "please don't post porn".

    One key difference, though, is that the lemmy moderation action does not create a message that goes to the user and opens a dialogue like it does on reddit. For whatever reason, lemmy users are expected to go check the mod logs when their stuff gets moderated, rather than a message being sent to them. This is expected behavior of the software, which feels really weird/wrong to me, but it is what it is.

    As far as this particular moderation action goes: my stance as an admin is that mods of the communities are allowed to moderate their community as they see fit, so i have no real opinion one way or the other here on if that should be allowed or not.

  • For me, legacy of the wizard was a game my parents rented once when I was young, and I had one night to play it. I stayed up late playing it all night and my parents returned it the next day.

    I didn't know the title of the game so I spent nearly 30 years trying to figure out what it was, but it was obscure enough and my memories hazy enough that people thought I was making it up or something.

    I finally figured out what it was about a year or so ago when I just sat down with a complete list of nes games and went through them one-by-one until I found it.

    After I found it, I played it all day, and with the help of a walkthrough and save states beat it. Probably one of the most satisfying game finishes of my life even if I had to use modern cheats to get there.

  • Why not PNG?

  • there's a number of games that already use this mechanic, and i'd honestly have to agree. The DR aspect of it can make fights drag out pretty badly when you have to roll to hit, roll for damage, roll for reduction, and said reduction can reduce the damage to nothing. The few times ive played a game that does this, i don't know how many rounds went "the goblin attacks, hits you for 3. Your armor reduces it to zero. You attack, hit the goblin for 4, but the goblin's armor reduces it 0" and back and forth like that several times.

  • in my non-profressonal opinion, overall, its alright. Not great, not completely terrible. It's better than the spelljammer books they put out a while back, but it's far from the best they've done for 5e.