

Not sure what you want to show with that screenshot. It tells you that 700 MB of your installed RAM is reserved for your integrated GPU which doesn’t really have to do anything with Windows.


Not sure what you want to show with that screenshot. It tells you that 700 MB of your installed RAM is reserved for your integrated GPU which doesn’t really have to do anything with Windows.


I just didn’t plot anything anymore tbh. I originally wanted to make stencils for electro-etching but I realized that I don’t really have that much of use for it.


I did it with my ender 3, using a printed bracket to hold the knife. It’s a hassle to use and I barely use it because it’s such a pita. I managed to make a few nice cutouts though so it’s definitely possible. I just wouldn’t recommend it.
So, a typical pupil is around 2 mm in diameter in bright conditions. With the Rayleigh limit that results in an angular resolution of 1.22 * 60010^-9 m / 210^-3 m = 3.66*10^-4 rad
At a distance of 5 x 3 mi = 15 mi = 24.1 km this corresponds to a point to point distance of
tan(a/2) = (d/2)/l
d = tan(a/2) * l * 2 = tan(3.66*10^-4) * 24100 * 2 = 8.8 m
So in conclusion, with regular, human-like eyes he could discern points that are at least 8.8 m apart in the best case scenario. Discerning hair color from the color of the clothes would need a much higher resolution, and the horsemen are probably not 10 m apart from each other either. And again, this is a theoretical limit, real-world resolution would probably be significantly lower.


have you tried the eurokey layout? At least for German it has all the relevant characters easily reachable.
even if you ignore curvature you have a resolution limit that depends on the aperture. Look up Rayleigh criterion for more info


Balatro has an Android version which is great
It ran super stable for me on Mint a few years ago without any fiddling
Most organic things will get converted to biomass/CO2/NH3/… in the end. Inorganics will probably be sediment at some point.
They’re both code/text editors, or what would you call VSCode instead? An IDE? you can make an IDE out of nvim if you want.
Yes, there is a vim mode in VSCode, but in some cases it can be very slow (like editing a few thousand columns at once), and is not as tightly integrated.
1 kW is 3412 BTU/h (=BTUs)
Most induction stovetops have a boost function with around 3-4 kW (that’s about 13000 BTUs).
BUT contrary to a gas stove top, almost all of the energy is actually put into the pot instead of the surroundings (only 30-40% of the energy from a gas stove is used to heat the pot). Meaning that a 4 kW induction cooktop should be comparable to a 40’000 BTUs gas stove (single burner).
Most nvim users I know have their setup very much customized. That takes time, effort and is a pita. But afterwards you have a tool that just works like you want it to work, and is super fast (at least compared to VSCode).
you can change that if it bothers you


Get a 2 TB SSD (the one you chose is fine)


Medically: nothing
As a European, wearing outdoor shoes at home indoors feels gross and unhygienic.


TeXStudio if you want something that is easy to set up. VSCode + LaTeX Workshop if you need features from VSCode (other extensions, git integration,…).
Note that you still have to bring your own LaTeX installation (I always use TeXLive, but there are other options)
For literature I’ve found Zotero + BetterBibTeX plugin very nice, otherwise JabRef also exists but is much more “raw”.


Reference management is one thing LaTeX is really good at. Especially if you use it with a literature management system such as Zotero.
VSCode + LaTeX Workshop Extension is what I use today, but I would recommend TeXStudio as editor if you don’t need any specific features from VSCode.
Do you need to flood/drain them? Our plants do quite well with regular watering inside their pots, without removing them from their spot.