Well, if they say it's "all" wet, they are clearly a positive subtype of ??????? as compared to "the lower half of the inside of my cup is wet!"
udon
I'd love some FALGSC!
Yeah, I guess I was thinking about this as "If we were to set a productivity goal for humanity, where would that be?" It's a bit tiring in everyday life (in my line of work but I guess everywhere?) that you can always produce more of everything and there is no point where your todo list is just empty for a while. If it is, just add more items.
Not a fan of UBI here as a practical solution, but it's nice as a heuristic vision in discussions. It wouldn't solve any problems on its own, prices would just adapt and you're back at 0. That is, unless you put in the effort to fight the political fights for regulation of rent and food prices, working conditions etc. And if you do that well, you don't need UBI. Anyway, UBI as a concept helps "summarize" where such fights would be needed IMHO, I just don't believe it would magically make exploitative businesses not exploit everything they can.
Well, I think in that scenario I thought about transportation as included in the 5min/week workload. Basically you click 3 buttons and everything goes wroom on its own from there.
Thanks for the long list! I'm not "opposed" to typst, whatever that would mean, just a bit cautious picking up new workflows/investing into skills that may become irrelevant 2 years later. But it seems that for my use case the main advantage are more useful error messages (which does suck sometimes using latex). I also see a potential new use case, if I need to use/create a new template, which can take some time with latex. The other points are not really bothering me. I write my texts in vim and build the pdf later, once the text is finished. Latex is fast enough for that.
I've seen this floating around a few times but am too tired to invest energy into this specific hype train. What exactly makes it stand apart from latex or markdown (then pandoced into latex)? Genuine question. I think once you've found your way around Latex, the major pain IMHO is whenever you apply it for a new use case and need to find out which packages to load that are not outdated. Ah, and alt text for images. But AFAIR this is already mostly solved, just not shipped widely yet.
Pros of Latex I think are important to keep in mind:
- it works since ever and for probably the rest of all our careers
- there is an established community
- the codebase doesn't change on a whim
They are all exactly equally large
8th floor with broken elevator
I can only read half of that and it looks like a malware link to me.
But sorry, a nickname is written in Japanese script is not a reliable indicator on this platform. By that logic, I might also be Japanese 🍜
Hey, that's ミャクミャク!