Thanks for the advice! I think another reason for messy fingers is the way I hold the pen. It's easy to come into contact with the nib or the exposed part of the feed when you're not careful. I might just be a bit…
Not at all. But it seems that the inside of the caps gets messy anyway. Probably from the nib making contact when capping.
When it comes to fountain pens and inks, I went down a rabbit hole more than once in the past. Noodlers makes some unique pens and inks. I have a Noodlers Ahab, for example, that has a very flexible nib. Different than…
Really liked this article. I wonder: the graphs treat learning with and without AI as two different paths. But obviously people can switch between learning methods or abandon one of them. Then again, I wonder how many…
Interesting; can you elaborate? Also could you clarify what you mean by changes that are "not always visual"? How would non-visual information exist in a purely visual medium?
Thanks for the advice! I think another reason for messy fingers is the way I hold the pen. It's easy to come into contact with the nib or the exposed part of the feed when you're not careful. I might just be a bit…
Not at all. But it seems that the inside of the caps gets messy anyway. Probably from the nib making contact when capping.
When it comes to fountain pens and inks, I went down a rabbit hole more than once in the past. Noodlers makes some unique pens and inks. I have a Noodlers Ahab, for example, that has a very flexible nib. Different than…
Really liked this article. I wonder: the graphs treat learning with and without AI as two different paths. But obviously people can switch between learning methods or abandon one of them. Then again, I wonder how many…
Interesting; can you elaborate? Also could you clarify what you mean by changes that are "not always visual"? How would non-visual information exist in a purely visual medium?