

Ok. I’ll start on it soon. I’ll just use Codeberg Pages to host it. My username on Codeberg is the same (hperrin) if you wanna give me access to the repo. :)


Ok. I’ll start on it soon. I’ll just use Codeberg Pages to host it. My username on Codeberg is the same (hperrin) if you wanna give me access to the repo. :)
Certain ones get used a lot, like centimeters and dekapascals.


Yeah, I’d love to. Would you want just a static site for now that you could use for promotion?
Oh, also I do voice acting, so if you need that, especially for things like announcer voice, I can do that.


These are really cool! Do you take commissions?


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No, it’s ultimately defined in joules.
every 1 K change of thermodynamic temperature corresponds to a change in the thermal energy, kBT, of exactly 1.380649×10−23 joules.


I would be interested in helping, but I am a web developer. Do you need help in that regard? Maybe for some sort of online account management platform, or just a website? I can design an API that the game could read from for publishing/finding servers and integrating with the player’s online profile. I can code in Svelte and React, and Node.js on the backend, particularly SvelteKit.
I just noticed you hadn’t bought the domain names, so I bought them to make sure nobody swiped them from you. I can transfer them to you after ten days (Cloudflare’s waiting period after registering them). I got supertuxsmasher.com and .org.
I also run an email service and would love to provide free email for the domain to you if you’d like. You can check out my service at https://port87.com/. I can help you set it up if you’ve never done that sort of thing before.
I have some family members who are composers. If you come up with a melody for the game theme, I could ask if they could develop it into a score. My sister’s orchestra might even be willing to record it if I ask super nicely. 😁
The original Fahrenheit system was actually pretty clever. It set 0° at the temperature of brine and 96° at internal body temperature. That made marking a thermometer really easy. Like, ridiculously easy. 96 is divisible by two many times before reaching a decimal.
Because the freezing temperature of water was really close to 32°, the later Fahrenheit system set that as the lower temperature and 212° as the boiling point instead of using body temperature. That made marking a thermometer more difficult, and basically took away Fahrenheit’s only advantage. It was more consistent though. Now Fahrenheit is formally defined based on Kelvin.
Centigrade was originally marked as 100° at the freezing temperature, going down as temperature increases to 0° at the boiling temperature. Obviously that didn’t last long. The downside is that marking a Celsius thermometer depended on atmospheric pressure. Now Celsius is defined based on Kelvin by -273.15° being absolute zero and a degree corresponding to a very specific amount of heat energy increase.
So yeah, Fahrenheit hasn’t made any sense for many many years.


I would say equally stupid. Data centers essentially have two inputs and two outputs (obviously a lot more in real life), data/electricity and data/heat, respectively. All of those are easier on the ground, but removing heat makes it an absolute deal breaker in space. You simply can’t radiate that much heat in space. You would need unrealistically large surface area exposed to the vacuum of space.


That just means he’s going to cut quality control.


No matter how expensive it is, I’m getting one.


And the players should win this case. It’s pretty obviously true that Nintendo would be recovering tariff money twice.
The window frame is above where we can see, outside of the frame of the picture.
I think maybe you’re seeing the crease in the door and thinking that’s where the door meets the window, but that’s just a decorative crease.
There is no window in that photo. The photo shows the bottom half of the door, below where the window would be.


Makes perfect sense for a space rocket company.
Also, there’s no way I’m letting Mecha Hitler write my code.
You ever see Transformers?
This looks nothing like AI slop. It’s the bottom half of the door.
But they didn’t say “stemmed”. They said “stemming”. But sure, they’re technically correct in a historical context. I wanted to be more precise about the current definition. Under that current definition, it’s actually degree Celsius that stems from Kelvin.