Lvxferre [he/him]

I have two chimps within, Laziness and Hyperactivity. They smoke cigs, drink yerba, fling shit at each other, and devour the face of anyone who gets close to either.

They also devour my dreams.

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: January 12th, 2024

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  • There’s a site called anilist.co you’ll find practically any anime series out there.

    Since anime is a medium, don’t be surprised if someone loves a series you hate or vice versa. It’s like books, you know? And for recommendations it’s often useful if you list some series or genres you enjoy.

    Unboxious’ recommendations look fairly good IMO. I’ll add a few ones:

    • Suspense: Uzumaki
    • “Innocent” fantasy: any movie from Studio Ghibli, specially Sen to Chihiro (Spirited Away), Kimitachi wa Dou Ikiru ka (The Boy and the Heron), and Tonari no Totoro (My Neighbour Totoro)
    • Darker fantasy: Kimetsu no Yaiba (Demon Slayer)
    • Mecha (big robots): Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann
    • Isekai (transported into another world): Log Horizon
    • Mystery/“detective”: Kusuriya no Hitorigoto (The Apothecary Diaries)

    Remember to have fun. Watching anime is supposed to be enjoyable; if for some reason you aren’t enjoying a certain series, there’s no shame on dropping it.

    Usually it’s said three episodes is enough to know if you’ll like a show, but sometimes a single one does it.

    Also, watch out for people shitting on the others’ tastes in social media, it’s simply better to block those.

    In some cases you enjoy the story and characters of a series, but the production sucks really bad. In those cases, it’s worth to check the manga or light novel series the anime is adapted from. (Hoshi no Samidare, I’m looking at you. Such amazing manga series deserved a better animation.)

    It’s worthy to dig into Japanese culture. It makes you enjoy what you see more. And if you’re into cooking, making the dishes you see in anime at home can be a really fun way to experience a bit of that culture.

    The “no life weeb” stereotype doesn’t hold true any more. A lot of us have jobs, children, social life etc.

    Some people flip the shit out if you use a plural -s in “anime”, “manga”, or “pokemon”. You can either avoid this or to pre-emptively use it to detect and block pass-aggro people from social media. (I never did the later in Lemmy, but it works).


  • Installation process seems to be way more complicated than the one I did for Mint in my mum’s computer some time ago. Hard to compare, though; sometimes hardware clicks well with a system but not another.

    Dolphin and Nautilus handle compressed files entirely transparently and much faster than Explorer does

    Even Thunar does it, through the archive plugin. Thunar. From Xfce, a desktop environment known for avoiding fluff by design. Caja too, even if it’s based on the GNOME 2 version of Nautilus.

    Office, email: I guess installing LibreOffice and Thunderbird would be against the spirit of the challenge, right?

    Managing applications is also not as nice and effortless as it is on Linux

    I’m so bloody glad for package managers.

    Windows 11 also has a combined emoji/symbol picker now (Super + .),

    Somewhat unrelated question: does anyone know if .XCompose works with Wayland? And if it doesn’t, what do I use as replacement?





  • I’ve been using Linux for long enough to have been disappointed multiple times. And 90% of the time it’s about regression. In no particular order:

    • Liferea losing the ability to start hidden.
    • KDE 4.0, a trainwreck that made me leave KDE altogether back then.
    • Network Manager bug forcing my local IP to change, even if I need it static and predictable.
    • Ubuntu ads. I think it was the straw that broke the camel’s back and forced me into Debian.

    etc.







  • I like measuring things. Probably a carryover habit of my first uni (Chemistry), but the end result tends to be more predictable, and it helps me to avoid dumb mistakes from lack of attention.

    For some things there’s a bit more leeway to eyeball things; for example, if I’m adding water to dough I’ll probably eyeball it. (Specially as hydration tends to behave weirdly in rainy days, so it’s better to go by texture than by fixed amounts.) But I’m certainly not eyeballing the amount of salt that goes in the polenta, rice or meats.

    Side note I hate that Reddit oversimplification where people seem to believe cooking allows eyeballing but baking doesn’t. It stinks mental laziness; I think in both cases there’s some room for eyeballing, and some for precision.







  • Ooooh, this part is hilarious. Nina thinking Eris is just making shit up on the spot, then finding Rudeus is actually way stronger than she expected!

    Small info on the styles:

    • Sword God Style values initiative. If you can cut down your opponent before they react, you win.
    • Water God Style values defence. Provoke the opponent to act on predictable ways, so you can counterattack them.
    • North God Style values flexibility. Dirty tricks, usage of the terrain, whatever it takes to stay alive.

    They’re in a weird triangle of sorts: Sword God overwhelms North God, North God tricks Water God, Water God counters Sword God. That explains why it’s so important for Eris to train against all three styles; if she focuses on a single one, Orsted can simply use the one that beats it.