Mint is a good recommendation. I’ve used it for most of a decade because I just want my system to work.
Mint is a good recommendation. I’ve used it for most of a decade because I just want my system to work.
Nobody is both that bored and that motivated. Unless paid.
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This feels very “just found out about politics and damn” tbh.
Ok.
I think this would be of value for sharing with people that aren’t aware (my kid when she was younger).
Or is there a better resource to do this?
This is all I’ve run across on reverse engineering, so far but it is quite interesting.
https://bsky.app/profile/filippo.abyssdomain.expert/post/3kowjkx2njy2b
Is there really anything they couldn’t collect?
I think you win.
If you haven’t yet, give Lief Ove Andsnes’ rendition a try.
Everyone has their favorite interpretations, I guess. This is one of mine. From a pianist that impressed the hell out of me when I first heard him.
(The album Horizons if the link doesn’t work or you’re boycotting Spotify or whatever)
God I am getting crazy goosebumps just listening to this again. I love the 9th symphony so much.
Oh wow that is amazing. Thank you!
I forgot how much I love this kind of choral music.
Damn. That is no mean feat, I would imagine.
Although I don’t even know what I don’t know about video cards so it’s no doubt a monumental task. Especially for one guy.
It isn’t rude to examine religious texts, myths, and traditions from an academic viewpoint, however.
According to World History Encyclopedia, the story is adapted from non-Israelite, near eastern myths.
… the concept of a “garden” of a god(s) was a very common metaphor in the ancient Near East of where the god(s) resided. For the narrator of Genesis, the “Garden in Eden” was imaginatively constructed for an etiological (origin or cause of things) purpose, not as a divine residence, but of the first man and woman on earth – Adam and Eve. As generally accepted in modern scholarship, Genesis 1-11 is labeled as the “Primeval History,” which includes mythologies and legends that were very common not just in Israel, but throughout the ancient Near East. These myths and legends are not Israelite in origin but were adapted by the biblical writers for either polemical or rhetorical purposes.
“Lobsters on snowbanks in cute little mittens” would fit the theme and the meter better… Just sayin’
What are you trying to achieve?
It’s kind of horrifying nobody thought that through. What else did they fail to think about?
This doesn’t seem that much worse than American rules that have already been in place for a long, long time.
Do you really want to be like the US, though? I think maybe that’s not a great idea. (Source: am from US)
Totally agree. Have been there and done that quite a few times too.
POLISH HIM!
“When he reached the New World, Cortezh burned hish ships. Ash a reshult hish men were well motivated.” —Capt. Ramius, played by Sean Connery in The Hunt for Red October