I enjoy writing with fountain pens, and I’ve got to justify the numerous pens and inks I have. I also find it helps me with recall and focus. So I take notes by hand most of the time.
I enjoy writing with fountain pens, and I’ve got to justify the numerous pens and inks I have. I also find it helps me with recall and focus. So I take notes by hand most of the time.
Same. I’ve written a fish plugin, but other than that I just fish pretty much stock. It works and just gets out of my way.
Same. I chose programming.dev because it was close to my interests and seemed less likely to be drawn into federation drama. Losing Reddit already made me feel “homeless.” I was worried about choosing a home instance, and then being forced to create a new account all over again because of admins squabbling amongst each other and instance drama.
I recommend installing Obtainium. In Obtainium, click Add App and then paste the Codeberg URL for Infinity for Lemmy: https://codeberg.org/Bazsalanszky/Infinity-For-Lemmy
Obtainium will take care of installing and updating from various code repositories whether they’re hosted on GitHub or Codeberg or some other place.
This exists!
The ASUS ROG Claymore II is an 80% “optical mechanical” with a detachable numpad. Mountain also makes several TKLs and an 60% (the Everest 60) with a detachable numpad. You could also make one using the KBDcraft Kit Adam and Kit Addams.
However, I agree with the others. I think you get the best build quality using a standalone mechanical numpad. If I was going to get a split design, I’d probably get an Ergodox or Keychron Q11 QMK or something similar.
I wouldn’t mind some shared content from quality communities, like the posts from the machine learning research community.
This is a quality of life improvement I can get behind!
I’ve used Trade and Atlas, and I’ve had a few good coffees from each. They’re interesting because they’ll send me beans I might not have considered, and it’s helped me better develop my opinion on what I do and don’t like.
I tried the Hoffman method today and it’s quite good (provided you pour the iced coffee over additional ice before drinking). I didn’t quite get a sweet fruit tea-like cup (like I usually do with a hot pourover light roast), but I certainly got more of the origin characteristics I was looking for.
Thanks for the tip! I tried this and ended up with an uneven extraction and slightly bitter cup—although that may be more due to the ratio than the brewing method. I typically brew pour overs at 1:17, but the recipe I found online was 1:4:7 ratio (48g coffee to 212g ice and 340g water). Since coffee extraction is non-linear, I don’t understand how brewing with half the hot water yields the same extraction (based on the dynamics of coffee extraction). What brewing ratio worked produces a more balanced cup for you?
EDIT: I should add I ground medium-sized (3 on a Fellow Ode Gen 1) and used 99° C water.
I use this on my Galaxy Tab and S23U all the time. It’s really handy to be able to draw a diagram or take down a quick name or number.