

Technically, I guess.
Unfortunately, we still seem to be very far away from it replacing our usual way of growing meat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V0zCf4Yup34
Technically, I guess.
Unfortunately, we still seem to be very far away from it replacing our usual way of growing meat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V0zCf4Yup34
Going for some locally adapted strains is a great idea. Thanks for that! I’m actually a terrible gardener so I hadn’t thought of it. I just used what little seeds my neighbour gave me, and in limited area because I tend to prioritise fruits over veggies and they are what dominate most of my garden. The little space I experimented with tomatoes on is currently occupied by legumes.
The tight temperature range is something I very much agree with you on. I think climate conducive to their growth play a big factor in disease immunity as well. I’ve seen them thrive like weeds in sub tropical regions. But for some reason, even in controlled conditions, they fail to do that well here in my area.
Exactly my thoughts. I have no idea where she got all that confidence from, though in her defence, she doesn’t have the power of hindsight here like we do. At least there’s no noticeable bend in the wrong direction.
This video was exactly what first came to mind when I read “badly understandable dialogues”! It bothers me that as we got better mics, the actors became more unintelligible instead of the other way as one would predict.
Somehow, I did not see that comment coming. I laughed out loud.
I’ve always relied solely on my AC for both my summer and winter needs. I’m also interested in learning what may be a more efficient option.
Unfortunately, I don’t think employers seeing their employees as mere resources is exclusive to Japan. Though they definitely like to dial it up to 11 there.
I don’t think Reddit will feel a noteworthy sting anytime soon. But that’s okay. Like some here have already said, what matters is fediverse ultimately growing big enough for us to have a sizeable group of people to interact with regarding hobbies or any random topic posted here.
Although, I can’t move on without whining about the bug or whatever it was that prevented me from commenting anywhere for the last …almost a month! On rare occasions, I couldn’t even see anything on my feed so Lemmy clearly has ways to go in regards to matters outside of its contents.
I too was initially wondering that. A comparison with a similar camera to that of the Mars rovers would’ve been more interesting. We have much more capable cams here at home.
“Only” the first two apply to me as I blasphemously love Windows, but I somewhat agree with your observation.
In this day and age of worldwide financial morass? I applaud you for your courage (or affluence maybe), my friend.
That depends on the phone. I remember some old Samsung flagships using a native 16:9 sensors. That was over at least half a decade ago though. Another device with such a setup I remember would be the Nokia 8 Sirocco.
And, the now extinct Windows phones had atypical arrangement where neither aspect ratios would result in the full usage of the sensor, though 4:3 got closer. The Sony Xperia 1 V has multi-aspect ratios too, afaik, where you’d gain some horizontal FOV at the expense of the same vertically when switching from 4.3:3 to 16:9 or longer.
For the vast majority of the phones and their users out there though, I agree with you. I’ve seen way too many people go with 18-21:9 pictures, probably thinking they’re capturing more of the scene as they see that aspect ratio fill up their screen.
Does it have to be Android exclusive? I still play Duet infrequently. Simple but beautiful, pay once, and engaging gameplay. Besides that, I don’t game much nowadays.
That is the goal, yes. One thing I’ve noticed is that the relative scarcity of posts here, especially news, has me frequenting a lot of news sites directly. Which I think is a good thing. Of course, one can’t expect Lemmy to rival Reddit’s content and engagement from the get go. We’ll see where the platform is headed in the future.
I deleted my account so there’s no going back for me. Not that I would anyway. I’d be lying if I said I don’t miss some of the subs I used to lurk on there, but that’s not something I can’t move on from. I still have many informative comments and posts I’d saved up in RES though.
Speaking of which, I came to know way too late that the max number of saved items in Reddit is 1000. Does anyone here have a clue on whether or not Lemmy has a similar restriction? I lost many good posts and comments I’d saved up for years due to that limitation until I switched to RES saving.
There are dozens of us.
In all seriousness, I do occasionally visit select subreddits even though I no longer have an account. I’d like to think leaving reddit has changed my internet browsing habits in a good way.