Captain_Shakespeare

joined 1 year ago

Agreed - working as intended, and it's not just LDS. I'm in FL and churches here have been opposing publicly funded safety nets for my whole life, in favor of voluntary, often church-led, donations.

I have a 10 year old CPU and I think Baldur's Gate 3 has better performance than Battletech sometimes.

Witcher 3 doesnt need leveled enemies or loot. There is already a wide enough variety of monsters and equipment to convey player progression, and the leveling only exists to make sure that Geralt is as vulnerable to human enemies at the end of the game as the beginning. That's great! That's the kind of world it is. I just don't think you need constantly increasing hitpoints & a loot treadmill to keep it that way.

[–] Captain_Shakespeare@reddthat.com 8 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

...just in case you were on the fence on whether the 'quiet quitting' articles and viral 'nobody wants to work anymore' pieces were just employer temper-tantrums, here's CNBC trial-ballooning some fresh derogatory shorthand for workers who know what their labor is worth.

The only way I get the equipment or maintenence time that I need to do my job efficiently is if I make my immediate superiors strategically miserable on occasion. If I did what the article insists is the ideal, I'd be doomed to silently perform the same temporary, time-wasting fixes every week forever.

You can't count on your work to 'speak for itself' if the company isn't specifically examining your contributions in the first place. They will happily presume that your work is exactly interchangeable with everyone else's because most middle managers aren't experts at data collection and analysis and don't spend 8 hours a day seeing what floor workers do.

It's even worse if they're an outside hire, with potentially no relevant experience to compare it to. I swear companies do this on purpose to avoid elevating people with institutional knowledge and any sense of ownership in their area of expertise: they might end up accidentally paying someone what they're worth.

Unfortunately the Brandenburg test ("imminent lawless action") isn't too far from that. His actual speech was unethical and selfish, but unlikely to be deemed illegal.

Moto x rocked. Last phone I ever really liked owning. My galaxy phone is just a tool, comparatively.

This was super handy, but these days you have to carefully prune your notification permissions, or it would go off all the time

Smaller, narrower phones generally. Blackberry keyboards (and slideout keyboards) in particular.

Loved the various hardware oddities of the moto Z line: a rear fingerprint scanner that was easy to use while holding the phone, and of course the magnetic attachments. Used to carry two batteries that could hot-swap, and a game controller in my bag.

Swapped to SmartTubeNext. Has all the expected features plus better browsing and an 'auto-skip sponsors' mode.

[–] Captain_Shakespeare@reddthat.com 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I've found a new reason to use the subscribed page - it shows more videos per screen than the home screen, now that YouTube on Android TV has massively increased the preview panel to an absurd degree. There's barely any room for identifiers, just two or three video previews taking up the entire screen, like I've blown up a phone app on my TV. Wtf YouTube?

For a moment there, it looked like predictors of twitters final demise were going to be proven wrong - or would at least have trouble making a clear distinction in light of how durable twitter has been. Instead Musk is about to toss brand loyalty in the trash and paint a clear line for before-musk, after-musk. No version that succeeds twitter will ever be the twitter that rose to success, but now even a layperson will know the difference . May as well be an obituary.

 

Despite its failure to capture a significant market share, I really enjoyed the metro UI on windows phone and tablet. One UI on my Samsung was getting stale and has a nearly unusable apps drawer, and standard Android notifications are nagging and ungainly.

So I went looking for launchers and icons to get my live tiles back, and what do you know, these are available and they rule. Sharing here so others can try, plus a killer home screen background for good measure.

Apps: SquareHome and WHicons

Squarehome is surprisingly thorough in replicating live tile functions - all apps which are capable of image notifications will display on the home screen with a pic and summary/text right on the icon. You can dismiss with a long press, and exclude any apps from notifications that you prefer.

The consequence of this is that you don't need to use the android notification list at all if you don't want, and by getting selective you can avoid the bombarding nature of android style alerts. I actually find myself checking the apps LESS, and I consider it a good thing.

The launcher also gives you some interesting options for hiding the ever-present android interface: you can hide the top bar while on the home screen(s), as well as the nav buttons. You can enable scrolling instead of paging for your home. There are built-in shortcuts to storage, settings pages and configurables (silent mode, wifi etc).

Tile sizes are fully customizable. Included widgets are compatible with the major productivity suites. (Switched to outlook as you might imagine). Most users suggest using WHicons for the right look, which has a few thousand icons that automatically apply to the appropriate app.

App drawer has a list function if you hate the Samsung UI app moshpit. And I do. It also has a full suite of software and hardware shortcuts for things like 'activate flashlight' or 'load a file using this application'.

Spent a few days fiddling, but I couldn't be happier with it now.

The background is by u/jmlan

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