is there not a single other person who uses helix?
Gamma Crucis
is there not a single other person who uses helix?
for me its 1/10, i can see the orange but can barely tell what it is. unless i circled every orange dot there was no way i was gonna figure it out. i thought it was a diagram
there’s a crux linux?
what if a red giant star was placed in the pacific ocean? would y’all like to find out?
there’s only 18 cigarettes though
edot:cant count
ediy 3:cant spel
yeah, he’s actively promoting climate change. nothing wrong i see
the smash hit ball
bottom text (i think im going insane)
if you will it hard enough it can even play crysis.
seriously, most of the hype for this thingy comes from some random documentary directors who thought the ancient greeks were as intelligent as monkeys and such. anyone who says this is an alien invention is basically insulting any intelligent life who has come far enough to go interstellar
to clarify, this machine is way less impressive than what a lot of media claim it is. the greeks had hundreds of years of stargazing and records to figure out a model of the cosmos, and this is basically their whole model in a mechanism. unfortunately, at the time this thing was made, their model was pretty far off and they couldn’t come up with a better one due to philosophical reasons (the earth is the center! the orbits of the planets must be some sort of perfect circles!).
anyway, this thing is somewhat impressive technically, but is really bad in terms of engineering:
we knew that the greeks had a model of the cosmos before we discovered this (i think). we also knew, from greek records, that there were people discussing about “spheres” that tracked the positions of the planets, sun and moon as they moved through the sky. the main thing this mechanism shows is that the ancient greeks possibly pioneered complex gear mechanisms, and the knowledge was then passed on and on and went through times like the islamic golden age before coming back to europe in the form of clockwork and watchmaking.
the ancient greeks came up with their own model to track and predict
this machine is basically their mathematical models summarized into mechanical form
i forgot
fifth has 2 fs
i was here for systemd round 2
makes more sense if
you start counting from zero to 23 like a 24 hour clock
i think this was meant to be a shitpost and has no intended solution. out of all the crappy ones i could find on google this one makes the most sense, but given how there was probably no intended solution this one still doesn’t make a lot of sense overall
its the letter f.
once a year: thats the f in Feburary
twice a month: the month has 4 weeks and the 2 f’s are the First and Fourth weeks.
four times a week: the week has 7 days and the 4 f’s are the First, Fourth and FiFth days.
six times a day: a day has 24 hours and the 6 f’s are the First, Fourth, Fifth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth and twenty-Fourth hours (yes there are 2 f’s in fifteen)
roughly translates to Linux operating system’s core analysis
i’d just greet my new neighbours
wasn’t 19 june like 2 days ago? what happened?
deleted by creator
https://helix-editor.com/
essentially a terminal modal editor (like vim), but instead of specifying the action to perform then what to perform the action on (like “yank 3 lines”), in helix you select first, then perform actions on the selection (like “these 3 lines, i want them yanked”). it’s slightly better (according to others) because you get to see what you’re going to change in the file so you don’t accidentally delete 5 lines instead of deleting 4.
on top of that many features are builtin, like tree-sitter and lsp support, so you don’t have to spend 5 hours looking for cool plugins and configuring everything to get started (my config file is only 50 lines of toml).
the downside is that there isn’t support for plugins (yet), but there’s already things like a file picker, more than 100 themes etc.