wjrii

joined 2 years ago
[–] wjrii@kbin.social 0 points 1 year ago

I like Memmy well enough when I'm determined to use an app. Still holding out hope that a kbin one materializes.

Doom scrolling works fine, and discoverability is okayish. The search function mostly seems to bring up communities, so that's kind of what you'd need.

[–] wjrii@kbin.social 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

And for the final thing I’ll definetly wanna fix with no clue how, is that the Monitor is oddly Zoomed out. The text is all further back then it should be making for a weird look. Old Burn-in from when this thing was actively used also assures me of that. No clue how one can fix that, any suggestions?

Most CRT displays have potentiometers, adjustable by screw or knob, to control horizontal and vertical size. As always, be careful with flyback transformers, etc., so as not to die.

Burn in is a real and AFAIK permanent thing.

[–] wjrii@kbin.social 17 points 1 year ago (1 children)

This happened last month. On January 6, Ingenuity flew 40 feet (12 meters) skyward but then made an unplanned early landing after just 35 seconds. Twelve days later, operators intended to troubleshoot the vehicle with a quick up-and-down test. Data from the vehicle indicated that it ascended to 40 feet again during this test, but then communications were ominously lost at the end of the flight.

Sounds like NASA is of a similar mindset already.

[–] wjrii@kbin.social 34 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (6 children)

Most unrealistic part of the movie, and by god I'm including TIME TRAVEL, is that Scotty would be both dismissive of and insanely good at keyboarding text entry and use of a 1980s computer. Either he'd be pissed off because because there was no way to use this antique, or he'd be delighted at the chance to use his historical reenactment skills.

[–] wjrii@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

That's what I'm saying. I ate it too, or at least took a bite and started chewing before trying to figure out what was off here.

EDIT: LOL, now I have no idea whether I misread, or if @MajorHavoc edited their post to change "hate" to "ate". Probably the former, though I stand by my opinion that The Onion's best gags are always the headlines. 🤣

[–] wjrii@kbin.social 4 points 1 year ago

That's pretty cool, TBH. Not sure the GIJOE USS Flagg model was quite that seaworthy, LOL.

[–] wjrii@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

Thanks. I am overall very pleased with how it came out, especially on a budget. In particular, the layout is quite usable and versatile. Visually though, I've had to convince my brain that my hands are in the right spot. The left hand modifiers aren't actually too small or anything, but your hands are set up much closer to the left edge, even compared to a typical 1800 layout, so it's a mental adjustment.

I may or may not extend the keymapping out to include four spacebars and move some other bottom row stuff around, but that could just be that I got used to that layout on this one's immediate ancestor. I don't hit the wrong spot so much as forget that the spot I'm aiming for is now an Alt key.

[–] wjrii@kbin.social 7 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I don't hate it, but 50% or more of the average article's value is in the headline. They could go to lorem ipsum text and have minimal reduction in quality.

Moving this out of the contrext of the onion pushes it from “haha, WTF?” to just “WTF?”.

Completely agree with this. If you don't follow the specific artist, and I don't, it just looks like a right-winger cartoonist clumsily satirizing "wokeness" with a bad pastiche of an R. Crumb or Charles Burns "comix" style. Maybe the joke's on me for not going another layer deep and seeing how vapid the "satire" is and realizing it's meta, but the creatives on the American right are not known for their subtlety.

[–] wjrii@kbin.social 6 points 1 year ago

I can't really imagine the appeal unless it was a standalone device. The tactility and self-contained nature is the only thing that would make it feel like something "real enough" to bother with.

[–] wjrii@kbin.social 17 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Nah. a 2.5 meter aircraft carrier is not really any more practical today than it was in 1986.

[–] wjrii@kbin.social 4 points 1 year ago

Is "college town" agreed to be a denigration? I'd take it as a fairly complex descriptor that could be good or bad depending on your situation. I loved living in college towns. I'm not desperate to move back to one, but I could easily see myself retiring in one, and if you want a small town with more cultural and sporting options and a better educated populace than its peers, then putting up with some rowdy undergrads and a quirky mix of available businesses could be a perfectly sensible tradeoff.

[–] wjrii@kbin.social 6 points 1 year ago

cultural things that similar-sized other towns don’t have

Exactly. Similar sized. College towns punch above their weight when compared to their population peers, but that only goes so far. I have no doubt Pullman, Washington is cooler and more cosmopolitan than Walla Walla (despite the presence of two very small colleges), but it's no Seattle, for good or for ill, depending on your perspective.

 

“HE DOESN’T EVEN GO HERE!”

 

'60 Minutes' made a rare decision to interview Coach Prime twice in a single season of the oldest and most-watched newsmagazine on TV.

I continue being torn between appreciating that Deion strips much of the traditional BS out of college football and being annoyed that he then spackles on his own personal layer of different BS.

 

Buchner reunited with Crimson Tide offensive coordinator Tommy Rees after transferring in this offseason.

So one loss and we're back to the Jay Barker/Greg McElroy/Jalen Hurts (Bama era) game manager, eh?

 

Florida's had the number of its SEC East rival, winning nine straight at home and 16 of 18 meetings overall since 2004

Love you too, @g0d0fm15ch13f.

 

“People talk about this portal all the time," Swinney said. "Do I prefer the portal? No. But am I opposed to it? No, absolutely not."

Swinney said that they have considered taking players in the portal before, but it has to be the right fit.... "...but guess what? They got to love you too. Just because you want them don’t mean they want you. And then other guys that we have evaluated, but we like the guys we have here."

So, to paraphrase (and possssssibly editorialize): Dabo (1) tells everybody how much he hates the portal, and (2) expresses mild surprise that top portal targets don't choose to come to Clemson.

 

Is this maybe also the space to ruminate on what the BCS and then the playoff have done to the culture of college football? I'm (just) old enough to really remember what the pre-BCS days were like (and let's be clear... the BCS was a two-team playoff and nothing more or less). There were pluses and minuses, but it was not really some top-down thing forced on the fans. As national media coverage proliferated, the fans wanted something less chaotic than bowls'n'polls. "The good old days" were often deeply unsatisfying.

I think the repercussions really only come in hindsight. You have hypercompetitive participants and bragging-rights obsessed fans, so clarity also comes with the inevitable devaluation of anything outside the path to an increasingly less mythical national championship. If there was a benefit to the BCS, it's that 1v2 is such rarefied air that there's little point in stressing if you have no shot, but just enough big teams had a shot that missing out was increasingly viewed as a failed season.

Cue the 4-team playoff, possibly the worst of all worlds. Now you have enough access that it's truly depressing if a promising season doesn't result in a playoff bid, but not enough slots for any particular number of teams to come into the postseason with hope or excitement. The rest of the bowls seem like empty consolations for what you missed rather than celebrations for what you did. I think we could see that even before NIL and portal went nuts, with more and more opt-outs.

So, IMHO bring on 12 or 16. Pushing the bubble farther down the rankings makes it damn near a statistical impossibility that the "best" and/or "most deserving" teams (whatever the hell those terms actually mean) will be left out. 12 or more teams will have officially sanctioned hope, more conferences will see a visible path to the title, even if it's blocked by a goonie-ass redneck Cerberus fresh from a KISS concert. Even teams that don't make the playoff will have relevant games deeper into their seasons, and spoilers can get more chances to ruin seasons like cockroaches pooping in your cookie jar.

Sure, almost every good team's season will end in a loss, but if the players and coaches want a chance to test themselves, then I think they'll be more happy (or at least less unhappy, LOL) with that, which is good for the sport. No mid-major basketball school turns down a 16-seed for an NIT berth, and no G5 is going to complain about playing USC in a first-round CFP game.

The bowls will probably become even more irrelevant, but that barn door was unlatched decades ago and thrown open not long after that. Nobody who still cares about them in their current state will stop now. Fun trip, extra practices, nice SWAG bag, it's all still there, and hell, the teams in those bowls now will be the ones with less insane NIL and be more likely to appreciate the experience. The area where I see potential unintended consequences is with OOC scheduling, but realignment is jerking that around already, and maybe there's something to be said for emphasizing your conference performance.

TL;DR: More playoffs = as good as we can hope for. Change my view.

 

It's time to grade the College Football Playoff contenders that shined and struggled in Week 2

 

Scouts and coaches agree -- this is the most talented Texas football team in a long time. So can the Longhorns take the final step with a signature win over Alabama?

 

Defense lawyers for convicted South Carolina lawyer Murdaugh say Clerk of Court Rebecca Hill violated her oath of office as well as their client's constitutional right to an impartial jury.

 

I have always thought Army had the toughest row to hoe out of the service academies, just due to the fact that it's harder to sell athletes, who may still harbor some professional ambitions or at least have civilian FBS options, on joining "the one where people get shot at by tanks." AIR AND SEA SUPERIORITY IN THE POST-WW2 ERA AIN'T FOUGHT NOBODY, PAAAWWWWLLL!

Then, if you do have some loony who's into that, Navy at least still offers the Marine option and presumably a dining hall with the full Crayola spread.

 

The college football season rolls into Week 2 with a host of great games on tap. Here are all the key stats to know about the [so-called] biggest matchups.

Please let conference play start soon.

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