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robertlutece

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robertlutece
·hace 27 días·discuss
I'm perhaps misinterpreting your comment, but from the FAQ:

> Callback includes SMS, WhatsApp, [..]

> Callback includes Pure Maps, a popular Sailfish navigation app, and is compatible with several Android map, navigation, and transport apps, including Uber and Lyft.
robertlutece
·hace 3 meses·discuss
Leaks are a given in any Wright house. Indeed, the architect has been notorious not only for his leaks but for his flippant dismissals of client complaints. He reportedly asserted that, “If the roof doesn’t leak, the architect hasn’t been creative enough.” His stock response to clients who complained of leaking roofs was, “That’s how you can tell it’s a roof.”

Wright’s late-in-life triumph, Fallingwater in Pennsylvania, celebrated by the AIA poll as “the best all-time work of American architecture,” lives up to its name with a plague of leaks; they have marred the windows and stone walls and deteriorated the structural concrete. To its original owner, Fallingwater was known as “Rising Mildew,” a “seven-bucket building.” It is indeed a gorgeous and influential house, but unlivable. For its leaks there can be no excuse.

—Stewart Brand, How Buildings Learn
robertlutece
·hace 10 meses·discuss
I believe the floors have been pulled further apart to help with navigating around the model which would also steepen the escalators.
robertlutece
·hace 10 meses·discuss
Reminded me of this “Navajo weaver inspired by video games”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrDZIyYSMfI
robertlutece
·hace 12 meses·discuss
https://www.merriam-webster.com/wotd/feed/rss2
robertlutece
·hace 12 meses·discuss
I may be wrong, but I believe the distinction is between if I were to link to your post with one of your generated images which would get served as og:image and if I were to re-host your image to have it stand in as an "open-graph image" on my site linking to your post then what are the repercussions for me.
robertlutece
·hace 12 meses·discuss
I've had Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day [1] feed on my RSS reader for a while and I think these are quite usable.

[1] https://www.merriam-webster.com/word-of-the-day/calendar
robertlutece
·el año pasado·discuss
people change, people grow

I myself threw out about 3000 notes last year
robertlutece
·el año pasado·discuss
oh wow, this feels like https://github.com/stevearc/oil.nvim
robertlutece
·el año pasado·discuss
sure, but from 1 to 2 or from 1M to 2M
robertlutece
·el año pasado·discuss
off topic, but I recently read Alfred Lansing's "Endurance" and felt that was in spirit like "The Martian" although I remember the latter more from the film than the book.
robertlutece
·el año pasado·discuss
Ran into this the other day trying to screenshot something in the background of a music video playing through Spotify's desktop app. I opened youtube, took the screenshot from the video there, and wondered why the protection was necessary.
robertlutece
·el año pasado·discuss
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social-desirability_bias
robertlutece
·el año pasado·discuss
it reads like '(c:b)at|(d:h)og' and not 'c:(bat)|d:(hog)'
robertlutece
·el año pasado·discuss
having this in mind? https://weberworkshops.com/products/moulin-grinders
robertlutece
·el año pasado·discuss
I believe this[1] 99% Invisible podcast episode talks about foley during sporting events.

[1] https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/the-sound-of-sports/
robertlutece
·hace 2 años·discuss
it does work with glasses
robertlutece
·hace 2 años·discuss
I think it ambiguous. vim has vsplit ("Like |:split|, but split vertically.") that is "split right", however, wezterm has "Split Vertically (Top/Bottom). Split the current pane vertically into two panes, by spawning the default program into the bottom half"
robertlutece
·hace 2 años·discuss
+1, even when I unplug everything beside my keyboard and remove any virtual devices, it stumbles onto "unknown input port" before my keyboard. I'd like to try it
robertlutece
·hace 2 años·discuss
“The modern idea of testing a reader’s ‘comprehension,’ as distinct from something else a reader may be doing, would have seemed an absurdity in 1790 or 1830 or 1860. What else was reading but comprehending?”

—Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death