• 2 Posts
  • 25 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 11th, 2023

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  • New cars are ludicrously expensive, especially EVs.

    The most I can afford to spend on a car is maybe £14K, and that’s under the proviso that about £4K of that is my own money and the rest is a loan to be paid off over about 6 or 7 years.

    So yeah, I’m going secondhand ICE with about 50K miles on the clock and praying it doesn’t die before the loan is paid off (and preferably longer still so I can save a bit more towards the next one).

    I’m all for EVs, but they’ve got to bring the price down, and they’ve got to get the batteries to last long enough for the secondhand market to be viable.







  • I’m actually the opposite.

    Wanted to play DnD for years but never really had the opportunity as I didn’t have enough friends who also wanted to play so we could get a campaign going.

    We’ve got a group together last year and now manage to play about once per month.

    I think I’d have still been interested in BG3 even if I didn’t have a DnD group, but I’m definitely more interested in BG3 now than I would have been because of my DnD group.


  • I don’t play anymore, but did for about 10 years.

    I started with 1-1 lesson, but I think I only kept that up for a year or so.

    I think the biggest things you’ll benefit from through 1-1 lessons are:

    1 - getting some solid musical theory behind you (a bit of a bore, but useful when you’re trying to self-teach later on, and ultimately foundational to pretty much everything else).

    2 - Having someone there who can see, hear, and correct your actual playing technique. Poor technique absolutely ruins you as a musician when it comes to progression and trying to play anything a bit more advanced, because it becomes part of your muscle memory. That’s why it’s so important to slow things right down and play them correctly, with the right technique, and then gradually speed up, rather than jump into playing things at the correct speed, but doing it sloppily. Having an instructor who can observe and correct you in real time will do wonders.






  • I’m sorry but this is some dystopian bullshit that’s all centred on the false premise that communities are anything other than the people who choose to count themselves among them and engage in them.

    Reddit is just the tool some communities chose to use to gather their members and communicate. That’s it. If a community decides that Reddit is no longer the appropriate tool for the job, they can leave and build their community elsewhere. That may be a bit of an oversimplification, given the resources and tools those communities might lose through the transition, but strictly speaking, Reddit can’t do anything to stop the members of any particular subreddit going elsewhere, and a cryptocurrency absolutely is not going to fucking facilitate the ownership or mobility of a community.

    It’s a bullshit form of control that they want their users to willingly bind themselves to. Suddenly you’re not just participating in a community, but you’re genuinely invested, tied to something with a perceived monetary value, that even if you can theoretically remove from Reddit and take elsewhere, won’t have any more value than people choose to place on it, and won’t represent the community that generated it in any meaningful way.

    It’s literally “Hey, the more you use Reddit, the more of our crypto you’ll earn, which could be worth more than zero one day! You better keep using Reddit, huh? You wouldn’t want to lose that potential for more than zero eh? In fact, why don’t you encourage more people to use Reddit too? Then they’ll generate their own crypto, and the more people use our crypto, the more it’ll be worth for everyone! See, if you get five more people to use Reddit, and those five people also get another five people each to use it etc etc etc…”

    The fuck out of here.