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This is what I want but for PoE/PoE2 builds. I always get a headache just looking at the passive tree https://poe.ninja/poe2/passive-skill-tree

Not just laptops but the used enterprise micro PCs from Dell, HP, and Lenovo. All the same small form factor with very low TDP You can have up to 32 or 64 GB RAMs depending on the CPU, dual or even triple disks if you want a NAS etc.

I have seen quite a few the size of a Mac Studio / Intel Nuc, what are the device called that are the size of a pi?

yeah, depends on what the used market looks like where you live. Here I see way more laptops for sale for cheap than those enterprise thin clients.

And the thin clients when they are for sale tend to have their SSDs ripped out by IT for data security, so then it's a hassle to go out and buy and extra SSD, compared to just buying a used laptop that already comes with display , keyboard, etc.


I wish there was something like GOG but for old general software

3 — in one single comment. Even your comment is AI generated

Yep, I use em dashes all the time—still a human typing this.

Same here. It’s not the signal everybody thinks it is.

My favorite recent LotR media:

There is a Lord of the Rings MMO (like World of Warcraft) and a guy made a video recording a walk from the Shire to Mordor. Like you can just walk from the Shire to Mordor in the game. And it's almost 10 hours long in real world time to do that! But on top of that the whole journey is narrated by the Lord of the Rings audio book, with the relevant parts of the journey.

https://youtu.be/LYipECdYpXc

Incredibly relaxing


I recommend trying to visit the ArdaCraft minecraft server. They're trying to faithfully recreate the LotR world at 1:58 scale, and I've spent some time attempting to do the whole walk over some evenings the past few months. It's absolutely incredible the amount of love and detail has gone into crafting the world.

Oh man, something to watch and listen to in the evenings to come, thank you!

I don't have experience with the LotR Online outside of small clips here and there, but for the past 5 years or so I have been enjoying a bit more retro LotR "mmorpg", a free-to-play MUD that has been in development since 1991 or something: https://mume.org/

In MUME (Multi-Users in Middle Earth) getting from Bree to Mordor by walking won't take you 10 hours, but maybe 10 minutes at most. However, the trip and the destination will be full of dangers, whether it's from pve or pvp side of things.

As a side note, MUME is being developed by volunteers, and I believe the game itself is still ran on some Swiss University servers, where it all began, heh.


Back in the day I used to log in to a MUSH called Elendor (telnet).

It was simply magical and I have many good memories venturing through middle-earth and meeting fellow chars.


It is crazy to me how captivating and immersive text-based games can be. I've been exploring them for fun in recent years, the roots of modern mmorpgs. Fun to come across stuff you still have in modern games. :)

Ha! I watched it for a little while on 2x and it was very cool. Then Frodo hit the river and dives in, swimming across with perfect freestyle form like Michael Phelps!

I literally guffawed and thought, "Well, that's one good way of avoiding the dark riders." Makes that dramatic jump to the barge a little less intense. ;-)


It's about a 12 minute walk in Austin, from Hobbiton Trail to Mordor Cove.

https://maps.app.goo.gl/EgUb7EXTaHguiPKJ7


That is so good! Thank you!

Do you happen to know where does the narration by Andy Serkis come from? Is it a game? An audiobook?


Andy Serkis has versions of The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion all on Audible.

Andy Serkis did a narration of the Lord of the Rings books a few years ago. My guess is it comes from that.

A nice, relaxing trip to Mordor.

But why, couldn't he just fly there on an eagle?

It’s my book and they’ll walk if I tell them to!

He simply walked into Mordor?!


Oh, damn!

I bet 2027 will be the year when writing code by hand will be (re)discovered.

Hopefully.


Ah, so karma is a thing on HN as well. That would explain it.

Since 2001 I've used Red Hat, Mandrake, Slackware, Ubuntu, and Mint. I got rid of them at the first available opportunity. Elon Musk himself couldn't pay me enough to switch to Linux.


Confession: I got curious and tried Mint and ended up liking it. It's a lot better than it was a decade ago!

What's the best backup software on Linux? Something that works like Time Machine on macOS or Veeam on Windows. So one full backup then incremental ones at any given X hours/days and also browsable on file level for individual file restoring.

They tend to be server focused. borg, restic, etc. I don't know how practical they are on a laptop in a start/stop/suspend/internet-loss environment.

Blood is red due to iron content. Iron can only be produced by nuclear fusion in stars. We are all stardust.

I feel like iron in the blood gets a lot of airtime, but literally all the carbon in our bodies is star stuff too. As is the oxygen making up the water. And almost everything else.

The CNO cycle dominates fusion in stars much larger than our own.

The carbon transitions to nitrogen and oxygen repeatedly.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CNO_cycle


From your link:

> This result therefore paves the way towards a direct measurement of the solar metallicity using CNO neutrinos. Our findings quantify the relative contribution of CNO fusion in the Sun to be of the order of 1 per cent;

I find it amazing that we can analize the composition of the core of the Sun measuring the energy of the neutrinos.

(Photons are not useful, because they bounce a lot of times before escaping from the Sun, so they provide only information about the outher layers.)


The color of feces is also due (partly) to the iron content of blood. Stars are fecal particles that haven't been shat out yet.

> stardust

What form does stellar iron take once the star it was formed in fails? Is it a gas? Small solids? Individual atoms?


A hot, expanding, fully ionized plasma. Over weeks to years it cools, recombines into ions/neutral atoms, forms molecules in some regions, and a fraction condenses into dust grains, often as iron-bearing compounds like FeS and as inclusions in silicates.

> Over weeks to years it cools

Neat. Good source for reading up more on this?

> a fraction condenses into dust grains

Does it deposit straight into grains from gas? Or is there a period when a bunch of liquid iron is sitting around radiating its tail off?


I don't think liquid can exist in space.

If I remember from undergrad thermodynamics, the vapor dome describes states where liquid can exist, and (gas) pressure must be present.

https://www.sciencefocus.com/space/strange-reason-space-wont...


> don't think liquid can exist in space

Ordinarily, no. Whether supernova remnants count as “space” might be an alternate phrasing of my question.


Even before it exploded it would have been less dense than water. It just goes from a hot cloud of gas to a cold one.

As I understand it, a white dwarf is "electron degenerate matter," which is more dense.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Degenerate_matter


> liquid iron is sitting around radiating its tail off

With the energy imparted by the cataclysmic devastation of a supernova I'd assume it's a plasma that cools and sublimates into a gas. These clouds of gas typically have magnetic fields that can bring particles close together where they form dust/grains.



:D Thank you!

As I understand it, much comes out as nickel-56 that undergoes radioactive decay to iron-56 in short order.

It is also somewhat ionized.


> We are all stardust.

Is that meant to be good? I always chuckle when people make these kind of statements. Is the association to cosmic objects meant to make you feel better about something? I personally don't find stardust particularly interesting. The fundamental forces of nature on the other hand are much more appealing to me.


I believe it’s quite common for people to marvel at the vastness of the universe. For that reason, people might like the tangible link that they feel to the rest of the universe when they think of this - it’s amazing to think of how small we are in it, but also amazing to think of where “we” came from.

>prove that men who buy SUVs and Pick-Ups are, with very few exceptions, compensating for something ;)

What does that mean? The thread just repeating this compensating thing but not sure what does it try to say really.

Also most women I know drive SUVs or family vans not compact cars. Are they compensating for something?


I don't know if it is some much 'compensating' as it is a "look at my toy" showing off type of thing which isn't really directed at women. When I drive around metro areas it is pretty clear that the large majority of trucks are "house" trucks - they are never used for truck things. They are washed, waxed with nice shiny black tires.

Don't get me wrong - if you got the dough, by all means drive what you want. But most truck owners could get by with something else just as well.


I think he writes 'compensate' (https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/compensate, meaning no. 3) as a translation of 'compenser' (https://fr.wiktionary.org/wiki/compenser). There's a not-so-funny cliché: men with a small you-know-what supposedly tend to choose larger cars to make up for the difference in size.

> Also most women I know drive SUVs or family vans not compact cars. Are they compensating for something?

Freud: Duh?!


I wonder how does it work with multi button multi menu games like Pro Yakyū Spirits


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