

If you compare moving heat with making heat, you’re going to get pretty absurd numbers anyway.
Stopped using Reddit when the API disaster happened. Switched to Lemmy and stayed there for about 2 years. Now, I’m experimenting with Piefed.


If you compare moving heat with making heat, you’re going to get pretty absurd numbers anyway.


DNS filtering. I’m using NextDNS, because I can’t be bothered to be my own server admin.
Why? It does a great job at filtering out ads, tracking the rest of internet cancer on mobile devices. Works no matter where you are. With pihole, you get the filtering only when you’re at home, not when you’re scrolling funny cat videos while waiting for the train.


Get a Blue-ray drive (one that writes) and a bunch of blank discs. You won’t be talking to people online any more, but you can talk to them in person. When you do, you can find out what they downloaded before the great network blackout. When you find something worth having, take a copy of it. You won’t be able to store all the terabytes of cool stuff on your computers, so that’s why you have the discs.
BTW, you should totally download some Linux ISOs, relevant wikis, ebooks etc. Obviously, you won’t remember to download everything you need, so that’s where the blueray discs will come in handy. Also, other people might want some of the cool stuff you have, and discs are pretty handy for that as well.


Yes, but did some programmer just decide it’s maxed or green, and then somebody else toned it down to a more reasonable green? How did we end up with this specific shade?


Capsaicin gets on your hands when chopping chilis. Laundry detergent can get on your hands when doing laundry. Even small amounts can cause trouble if they get to sensitive parts of your body.


If you’ve been in contact with aggressive chemicals, it’s actually a really good idea to wash your hands before touching other parts of your body.
In one documentary it was called Δp, for pressure. Either way, bad stuff.


If I keep track of the quantities, I could definitely make the numbers match in the end. That’s probably a better approach than my “just wing it” style.


I’ve personally faced the cracker conundrum before. Leftover brie feels odd, because you shouldn’t just throw it in the fridge and forget about it. If that ever happens, I’m obligated to buy some more crackers the next day.
Leftover crackers are fine though, because they have a long shelf life. Brie doesn’t.
However, you can always put an extra thick layer of brie on a salt cracker to make the numbers match. However, if they’re grossly mismatched, it’s better to have leftover crackers IMO.


Not only that, it’s also asbestos free!


I knew someone would figure it out. Top tier detective skill!


Together, they’re awesome, but one missing is a bit disappointing. There’s clearly a synergy between these ingredients, like peanut paired with chocolate. Each flavour is individually just fine, but together they create something far superior. Being forced to settle for fine is just disappointing when the memory of something far nicer is still fresh in your memory.


I screwed up the original post. It went to a pretty quiet community, and I tried to fix that by cross posting it here, but I screwed up that as well. Initially, it was just a title and a picture, with no extra details. As soon as I realized that, I quickly copied the original body here as well. However, many people had already replied by then. Oh well…


What happens when you run out of bread, but you still have some cheese? Do you just eat all of it without adding anything to it?


Ok, so am I just supposed to eat the cheese without anything else?


That is a valid approach too.


Dark rye bread, round, pre sliced.


No need, if you have a normal kitchen at the destination.


Yeah who needs those carbs anyway. Protein is where it’s at.
“adult picture book writer”
You know, that sounds like a very different kind of profession.