I would also add that there are a lot of them on Lemmy, which is even more uncommon.
I would also add that there are a lot of them on Lemmy, which is even more uncommon.
This is a great way to approach the problem.
I agree with this after writing out some more comments. It’s basically just my experience and opinion as someone who went down the EDC flashlight rabbit hole.
I respect that, and really it’s about what works for you. For whatever reason, I’ve just found my phone light to be sufficient unless I have some real “work” to do. In that case, I’ll dig out a stashed headlamp or flashlight.
I do 100% believe in dedicated lights on bikes, because that shit is treacherous at night!
I’m also young, and maybe I’ve overlooked older people having a bigger issue with low light.
I might get some downvotes and that’s okay, but I disagree for EDC.
I went down this road and found that
I do think flashlights are amazing, but I didn’t like the hassle of keeping up with them day-to-day (I used an olight mini baton in my keychain for years, which now just lives in my backcountry first aid kit).
Reading through again, I do think it’s a good buy to have a flashlight, just maybe not for EDC for most people.
The federated concept as-is has been very hard for some of my friends to grasp.
How does one fix this?
That’s fair. I mostly use plain vim, and should branch out more. I hadn’t considered the extensions it provides.
and since we’re here… vim > emacs 😉
Thanks for the additional context!
Thanks! I always appreciate additional context with charts.
How was this measured? Is it overall expenditure (including insurance, taxes, etc.) or out-of-pocket expenses?
I like vim, too. However, isn’t it a text editor?
I classify emacs as a full-blown IDE.
It’s not just the initial install - some game updates absolutely thrash your CPU/drive. I’m looking at you, Epic (unless it’s better in recent years).
Downloading 5-20 GB updates was the easy part.
The local bar (I live in a small town).
I’m not really sure what some modern games are doing (compression and deltas?), but they can be extremely read/write heavy after the download finishes.
It’s almost like they’re decompressing a 20 GB file, then applying deltas against an 80 GB file by pattern matching or something obscene.
Chrome has it down pretty well, but I feel like the game studios just said “to hell with it, everyone has a high-end rig anyway.”
My heaviest-use machines are an M1 Pro for development and AMD Ryzen (Windows) for gaming. My general guess is that both are so much faster than their predecessors, I don’t notice any hit if there is one.
I have assorted OpenBSD machines using softraid encryption, but the OS is so lightweight (along with the software being used on them) that I haven’t noticed a disk speed hit so far.
I think macOS takes a similar hit. I thought it was pretty negligible with hardware acceleration baked into CPUs for AES these days, but I guess the drives have gotten so fast that they haven’t kept up.
My standard method is to remove the battery, resistively discharge, and drive a nail through it. I do this when I’m not able to recycle for whatever reason.
In your case, it might be best to drop them off at a specialized disposal facility. I think you can search for these online and mail them in.
deleted by creator
Ukraine having F-16s.