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how's your week going, Beehaw
  • Yeah I have a "nextlist" that I maintain in a Todoist project, that just lists the next book, game, movie, show, podcast, etc.

    I add to it and rearrange priorities occasionally, but it's super nice to have when I get into that analysis paralysis you describe.

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    The Patriot: How General Mark Milley protected the Constitution from Donald Trump
  • A long read, but a fascinating one:

    ...others tried to convince Trump that his rhetoric—publicly mocking Kim as “Little Rocket Man,” for instance—could trigger nuclear war. “If you keep pushing this clown, he could do something with nuclear weapons,” Kelly told him, explaining that Kim, though a dictator, could be pressured by his own military elites to attack American interests in response to Trump’s provocations. When that argument failed to work, Kelly spelled out for the president that a nuclear exchange could cost the lives of millions of Koreans and Japanese, as well as those of Americans throughout the Pacific. Guam, Kelly told him, falls within range of North Korean missiles. “Guam isn’t America,” Trump responded.


    Kelly escorted Milley to the Oval Office. Milley saluted Trump and sat across from the president, who was seated at the Resolute Desk.

    “You’re here because I’m interviewing you for the job of chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,” Trump said. “What do you think of that?”

    Milley responded: “I’ll do whatever you ask me to do.” At which point, Trump turned to Kelly and said, “What’s that other job Mattis wants >him to do? Something in Europe?”

    Kelly answered, “That’s SACEUR, the supreme allied commander in Europe.”

    Trump asked, “What does that guy do?”

    “That’s the person who commands U.S. forces in Europe,” Kelly said.

    “Which is the better job?” Trump asked.

    Kelly answered that the chairmanship is the better job. Trump offered Milley the role. The business of the meeting done, the conversation then veered in many different directions. But at one point Trump returned to the job offer, saying to Milley, “Mattis says you’re soft on transgenders. Are you soft on transgenders?”

    Milley responded, “I’m not soft on transgender or hard on transgender. I’m about standards in the U.S. military, about who is qualified to serve in the U.S. military. I don’t care who you sleep with or what you are.”


    Trump called Gallagher a hero and said he didn’t understand why he was being punished.

    “Because he slit the throat of a wounded prisoner,” Milley said.

    “The guy was going to die anyway,” Trump said.

    Milley answered, “Mr. President, we have military ethics and laws about what happens in battle. We can’t do that kind of thing. It’s a war crime.” Trump answered that he didn’t understand “the big deal.” He went on, “You guys”—meaning combat soldiers—“are all just killers. What’s the difference?”

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    Switching from Unity to Godot: Tips and What You Should Expect
  • I've been working in Godot for about 3 years now, and have never touched GDScript. I personally haven't felt like a second class citizen, and have rarely run into C# specific bugs, or found the documentation was missing for C#, other than when I was using the GD4 betas.

    That being said, I'm not currently targeting web or mobile with my hobby projects, and I know those are open issues with the C# support.

    My 2c.

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    What would your contribution be for a book put together to restart a a civilization?
  • Ever since covid hit, I've been keeping digital copies of several books like the following:

    • Reader's Digest DIY Manual
    • The Forager's Harvest - A Guide to Identifying Harvesting and Preparing Edible Wild Plants by Samuel Thayer
    • The Complete Guide to Edible Wild Plants
    • Back to Basics - Abigail R. Gehring And of course a copy of Wikipedia.

    I haven't gone full "prepper", but seeing how fast things went sideways at the beginning of covid, it makes me feel a little better to set aside a little bit of hard drive space, just in case.

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    Nitter is a read-only front end for Twitter
  • I'm sure influencers do, but over half the xevelopersyi like to follow on Twitter all created Mastodon accounts but never post to them. They all still only post to Twitter.

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    What do y'all use to plan your creations?
  • I've used sketchup in the past, and it works great, but for more recent projects I've moved over to blender.

    I don't go into crazy details for projects, so mainly I just need real world measurements and units, and the ability for my wife to be able to visualize the project as a whole. She usually designs everything and I just make it work.

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    I almost can’t believe it, but Google Tasks is finally kind of good
  • I use the free version of Todoist. I don't know what features google tasks all as now, but the big reason I switched from Tasks to Todoist was

    1. Being able to share lists - Super helpful for things like shopping lists
    2. Integration with things like Alexa - Going through the pantry and adding things to the shopping list with just my voice, or being able to add something to the shopping list just by saying it when it runs out is kind of like magic.
    3. Easy natural language recurring tasks
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    Got a game you feel passionate about? Sell it to us here!
  • Natural selection 2. The game is pretty much dead now, and it is not easy on new players, but no other game I've played has this awesome sense to teamwork and coordination with intense combat. It kind of ruined all other multiplayer games for me. I haven't found anything like it.

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  • voidfiles.github.io Awesome RSS

    A curated list of awesome RSS/Syndication related links

    It's always good to be in control of your own content sources.

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