Corngood
I’d just count calories and reduce the amount per day until you’re losing weight.
The time of day you eat things shouldn’t really matter. This will also teach you really quickly how to feel full on minimal calories. For me I just try to eat something like raw carrots when I want a snack.
Having a monarchy is stupid, but not as stupid as selling the Royal Mail to foreign billionaires.
It probably becomes CPU limited with those other compression algorithms.
You could use something like atop
to find the bottleneck.
Something which notifies you whenever a new comment or reply is made to a selected post/comment, so that you can keep track of any new conversation.
Something like this would be awesome as a core Lemmy feature IMO. It would essentially turn a post (or maybe any comment tree?) into a matrix style room. Lemmy is actually decent for long term discussion (e.g. helping someone with a problem), but not if there are more than two people involved.
I’d probably:
- make sure it can be reliably reproduced using something like
systemctl suspend
- try swapping the cables and see if it still happens on the same screen, or the same port
- look at journald/dmesg output for the period from suspend to resume
When the screen fails to wake, are you able to get it back by powering it off, or by unplugging it? Is it X or wayland?
If you stop shipping autotools generated artefacts in your tarballs, things will be a lot simpler.
Weirdly enough the malicious code does look eerily similar to the benign code, because both are unnecessarily obfuscated.
This is not a human written or readable file you’re talking about. It’s a generated script.
For 2d stuff my limit for non-nostalgic enjoyment is probably around:
- super Mario world
- Zelda LTTP
- ultima 7
- xcom
Stuff like that holds up pretty well IMO.
I agree with others about early 3d stuff being harder. Bad 3d physics especially drives me nuts. Carmageddon is the first game I remember with tolerable 3d physics, but I don’t think it was until around Halo that games were consistently getting it right.