As someone with a similar hobby, I personally hate this clip. It's obviously choreographed, but I just don't find concussions funny anymore.

Depends on what era. In Europe, coats of plates didn't really appear before the 13th century and full plate armor wasn't developed until the late 14th century. Before that you mainly had people wearing chainmail and a helmet if they could get it, or gambesons (cloth armor).

At that time, weapons were still somewhat effective against armor. Spears, axes, and arrows could punch through chainmail.

When full plate armor was developed, only the very wealthy had access to it, and everyone else continued to just wear chainmail and gambesons. Fully armored knights effectively became tanks that could slash their way through all the peons.

The only realistic way the foot soldiers could stop them was to have several guys swarm an isolated knight, each grabbing a limb, and hold him down. Then they would either stab the knight through the gaps in his armor (like the eyeslot of the visor) or more likely would drag him off for ransom.

That being said, there are plenty of instances of 2 armored knights fighting each other, with them often half-swording or grappling each other to the ground and stabbing each other with daggers.

But my earlier comparison to tanks still stands. Most of the time, tanks are actually supporting infantry units, with tank v tank encounters being relatively rare. Similarly, knights spent most of their time in relatively small units killing a lot of unarmored opponents

Then a small percentage of nutters have like 200 guns because they need to distrsct from having tiny dicks and an Ford F9000 wasn't large enough.

Keep in mind that not all gun collectors are compensating douchebags. Some of them are just autistic with a lot of money and want to have a personal museum.

That being said, yeah there's some compensators with a lot of guns

I had an engineering professor who grew up during the Iranian Civil War. He was interesting, and while the anecdotes were rare, they were crazy

I wouldn't recommend Pop!_OS at the moment. They just added their new desktop environment (COSMIC) and there's a lot of bugs.

Also, if you're wanting to play newer games that need driver updates you may have to wait due to the slow update cycle of distros based on Debian/Ubuntu

Sony is a close second, BTW 😁

Crunchyroll had a major security breach earlier this week

Atmospheric scattering would make that effectively impossible, even if you could rotate the mirrors quickly enough. The light rays would be too unfocussed to properly heat up anything in orbit

Published on April 1st

They were also pretty novel in their controversies.

They were the main ones throwing a hissy fit when GeForceNow wanted to automatically let you stream to any game you already purcgased on Steam. The game's devs wanted GeForce to require everyone to purchase an additional copy just to stream it through their service.

The game devs also started selling DLC while the game was unfinished, which is also shitty. And we're not talking skins either.

Or just blow up the scale so every piece is 45lb. Work out both the mind and body

Yeah, I've seen screenshots and their comments were pretty disgusting

Let's not get too hasty

44

(See comments for the punchline)

39
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works to c/opensource@programming.dev

Hi, first time posting in this community, so sorry if this doesn't belong.

I've been (slowly) designing some customizable input devices via a hobbyist license of Fusion360 the past few years. Unfortunately, Autodesk decided to remove the hobbyist tier and made all my files read-only, so now I need to migrate everything to a new software. For some background, I'm a mechanical engineer with experience in NX, Solid Edge, Solid Works, and Inventor, though I mainly code for my specific job.

My question is: what would be the best software for my use case?

OnShape

  • Has version control
  • Collaboration tools so other people can precisely fork and adjust dimensions to fit their needs
  • Professional-grade software, so less friction or need to find work arounds for some functions
  • Free tier automatically makes my designs open source. While I don't want to release until it's at v1.0, it's not a deal breaker
  • The software isn't open source, and I'm worried about them doing the same thing as Fusion360 in a year or so

FreeCAD

  • No built-in version control, and updates to files can't be tracked by Git
  • It's a bit jank to use, honestly. I'm trying to port my stuff over to it for now, but I'm having to force myself to do the work
  • Open source, so no worries about rug pulls
  • Can upload the original CAD files to a Git repository, and users can install the software and make adjustments themselves

OpenSCAD

  • Coding-based design means Git should be able to track updates
  • Significantly different to use from other CAD software, which is a downside for me. Part of the benefit to me for this project is to keep my CAD skills polished for work as a mechanical engineer, since my specific job doesn't do much with CAD
  • Open source
  • Users can easily make adjustments

Blender

  • Focus on meshes means it works very different from other CAD packages, and I explained why that's a downside previously
  • From what I understand, Git can't track changes between versions
  • Open source
  • Users can make adjustments, but being focused on meshes instead of precision means adjustments are more difficult

Is there any other software that I'm not aware of that fits my use case? Are some of my points about OpenSCAD and/or Blender wrong? Is there something else that's off? Helpful feedback is appreciated

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submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works to c/games@lemmy.world

Can everyone please stop claiming and speculating that Valve's new hardware will be loss leaders? If you watch LTT and Gamers Nexus's first videos on the announcement, they actually spoke with Valve's engineers. And the Valve representatives already said that the new hardware WILL NOT BE LOSS LEADERS.

There isn't even evidence that the Steam Deck was a loss leader. All GabeN said was that the lowest cost launch model was priced "painfully", which doesn't necessarily mean it was sold at a loss, it could easily have been sold at a very tight margin.

And no, low margins does not meet the definition of a loss leader. A loss leader is a product sold below cost, in that every unit sold actually costs the seller money.

I get the desire to speculate on new hardware. It's fun and it helps pass the time until we hear more info from Valve. But there's limits to what is reasonable. Valve has already stated that the new hardware won't be loss leaders, so hoping and/or claiming they are isn't reasonable.

Sorry for the rant, but all of the comments that seem to have only skimmed headlines are quickly getting to me

1

I'm going to making the plunge to Linux on my main gaming PC soon and I'm trying to make the final decision between Bazzite or Fedora. I've done enough customization on my Steam Deck that I know Bazzite will handle almost all of my use cases for this system, with one potential loose end.

I'm getting back into Skyrim modding and am planning to pull my portable Mod Organizer 2 install over. I've seen guides on it for Linux, so that's not as much of a concern. But, I'm wondering if it'll be a problem with Bazzite, as it's an immutable distro.

I have 3 drives on the system: 1 for the OS and 2 for storage. The MO2 install is very large between its internal downloads folder and tons of installed texture mods. Because of that, most of the modding will be done off of one of the storage drives. I'll also need some extra software like Microsoft C++ compiler.

Am I going to be fighting Bazzite the entire time with this setup? I'd prefer to run Bazzite if it won't be a hassle, but I'm not opposed to running Fedora if need be

2

A friend of mine linked me to this seller earlier today. They have some pretty tempting deals, but I've never heard of them before.

Has anyone bought from them before and was it worth it?

7

I've been kicking around the idea of running a server for games and chat woth some of my friends, but worry about everyone getting cut off when there's a disruption.

I've started looking into kubernetes out of curiosity, and it seems like we could potentially set up a cluster with master nodes at 3+ locations to hose whatever game server or chat server that we want with 100% uptime, solving my concerns.

Am I misunderstanding the kubernetes documentation, and this is just a terrible idea? Or am I on the right track?

23
submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works to c/games@sh.itjust.works

I got this cart racer a few days ago and ended up spending a whole day playing. In terms of mechanics, I think it gives even newer Mario Kart titles a run for their money, plus it has mod support so players can make their own tracks, characters, and vehicle options. And the base tracks are nothing to scoff at, they work for both novices and speedrunners, with parts of the track unlocking as laps are completed

2
submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

Over the past few months I've been thinking about what would be the best way to help me and my parents improve privacy and data storage.

With all the posts with cluster PC's recently, I'm wondering if the best option is to make a couple of NAS's with Raspberry Pi's with RAID, keep one at my place and another at my parents' house, and syncing their data with 2 private folders: one for myself and one for my parents.

But that opens up a few more questions. How to sync the data to match? Syncthing? Kubernetes? Should I go ahead and add Nextcloud to the Pi's? Should I make the Pi's expandable so other services can be added later, or plan to hook up a separate Pi to handle that? What else could I be missing?

152

As the title suggests, over the last couple of days there's been an influx of doomer comments over the SKG petition. While it's fine to disagree, I'm finding it suspicious that there weren't comments like this posted a week or 2 ago

124
Drone Defense (sh.itjust.works)
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Currently getting my first media server set up, and I'm wondering what the best directory would be for all the stored files. For reference, I'm working with Ubuntu server to follow the guide I'm using.

Mainly, I'm wondering if I should migrate /home/ to my RAID array, or leave /home/ where it is and create a new directory on the RAID array. Currently the server will just be for my use, but might expand it for others to use

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mnemonicmonkeys

joined 2 years ago