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pretty sure obsidian already has an extension for this


Oh boy, I sure love to see some guy with a blog waxing poetic about the future of AI. The insistence that "most people haven't realized come to terms with it yet", and then proceeding to make a total fucking guess out of his ass.

Reminds me of that one asshole who couldn't find a pen, and wrote a whole NYT article about "the demise of the pen".


LOL.

Makes people wish for the demise of stupidity.


2.5 hours a week is insanely low for any young person in good health. I'm positive that at least 8-12 hours of determined, physically intensive training compared to a measly 2.5 hours of "exercise" per week will do a hell of a lot better for anyone's mental health than treating the usage of one's body as somehow secondary to the "knowledge based" work we're all forced to do to make a decent living in modern society.


The latest recommendation is at least 16 hours of at least moderate physical activity per day. Basically, be moving from the time you wake up to the time you sleep, like our ancient ancestors. Turns out that's what the body evolved to optimize for.

Problem?


At one stage of my life I was running 10k every other day for months at a time. I was miserable. Also irritable.


Maybe not getting enough rest might have offset the positive factors?


Judo is even better, as you also learn how to throw people from your feet rather than starting on the ground all the time, and you pretty much have to lift weights off the mat to stay competitive.


> rather than starting on the ground all the time

BJJ does not start on the ground as standard, let alone "all the time". Matches start standing, and if you are only training from the ground you are missing out. That's not to say that stand-up and takedown training aren't much more in-depth in judo than in jiu-jitsu, though.


An ideal combo is submission wrestling combined with BJJ, you'll find MMA gyms train this way.

As someone who used to train at an MMA gym, going to a pure BJJ gym is weird because yeah, I'll shrimp out, get up to my feet, and my training partner is sitting there on their knees waiting for me to re-engage and my first thought is "this would be a great time for a kick to that completely unprotected noggin right there..."

Of course once on the ground, the BJJ peeps dominate, which is what UFC spent 3 decades demonstrating!


the problem with all these hipster vims is that it's too late in the game, vi is everywhere you're going to be remoting into and these are only going to be on your localhost, not even off a fresh install. your muscle memory might as well carry over, same reason evil mode is the only modal extension for emacs that matters and QWERTY is the only keyboard layout for sane people


That massively depends on how often you remote into machines. It's also the same logic for using bash instead of zsh, a battle that zsh is winning - it turns out that learning one does not prevent learning both.


that silky smooth 10fps video capture, great job rustaceans really knocking this whole "game development" shit out of the park.


Stroad... stroad? STROAD? STROOOOOAAAADDDDDDDD


This site is also pretty retarded and shill-friendly with its "you can downvote if you've accumulated enough good boy points" setup


Compare the opening paragraphs of this article in 2015 vs now:

https://web.archive.org/web/20151104200851/https://en.wikipe...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Race_(human_categorization)

Anyone thinking that Wikipedia still provides a nonpartisan platform which makes an honest attempt to catalogue all the angles on a specific topic without any blatant spin is either dishonest or naive.


This is cotrect. Wikipedia informs poorly on subjects that have political or cultural significance, favoring heavily certain ideologies over neutral presentation of facts. It has been hijacked by activists that make it impossible to introduce any data that is outside of what is fashionable today. Wikipedia still rides its old reputation, but does not deserve it any more.


It's strange to see someone use "bipartisan" as a stand un for "fair" or "factual".


Edited, "nonpartisan" is apparently the word I was looking for.


Echoing the other comment, I'm unsure what's wrong with the opening paragraph in the second link.


What are you trying to point out in the latest version? They are still pretty similar for several years apart.


My empirical evidence backs this up, I had deploying new releases to all servers completely automated down to just creating a tag in GitLab and every time the decision of actually running it turned into a series of emails and meetings throughout the week.


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