This one works well. Small, simple, no ads, open source.
https://www.lego.com/en-us/product/brick-clog-5010203 Pricing is on-par for LEGO.
Archive link: https://archive.ph/GxEPr
[flagged]
Earlier discussion of the original (https://generalrobots.substack.com/p/benjies-humanoid-olympi...) article: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45609922
Their one year trial ran out and now further use of nav requires a subscription. It was like this when they bought the truck.
That was fun.
That's the flight of SN9 from 4 years ago, not the IFT9 flight.
"I like to look at the list of macOS Bash commands." Sigh. These are shell commands, not "Bash commands".
From the Register article: "Fans of 3D printing will no doubt be pleased to note that some of the parts (notably one of the large gears) came from a printer, but only because buying missing bits online tends to take…
This is the better link!
I owned cars with an AM radio for 30 years. I never used it. I've now owned cars without an AM radio for 10 years. I don't miss it.
I had a new car that also came with a Sirius radio and 3 months free. I tried it, but found it often dropped out while driving through forested roads in my area. That made it annoying to listen to. I stopped using it.
It is not available on my Pixel 8 Pro, arguably the newest current Android device.
"Tens of thousands of people probably use it every day without thinking about it." Probably tens of millions at this point.
Not just someone, but rather Tim Dodd, aka Everyday Astronaut.
When making the comparison, don't forget to tally the effects and emmisions of drilling, pumping, refining, and delivering oil and gasoline to the point-of-sale.
More like "the danger of thinking you can trivially validate user-supplied input" before evaluating the string.
I see this is improved in today's Nightly Demo link, but I still find the result too low fidelity.
I noticed that all of the New York City metropolitan area was replaced with a single angled line, cutting off several large islands supporting a few million in population.
That link is CGI.
Looks like the peices from the game Ploy. https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/1591/ploy
Yes, the List of numbers page is inadequate. When I give a monetary gift, I like to make it start with an interesting number. And then I ask the recipient (e.g., my kids, or neices/nephews, etc) if they can figure out…
Sorry, that's not obscure!
I kept the installer for the last free version of SketchUp around for exactly this reason.
This one works well. Small, simple, no ads, open source.
https://www.lego.com/en-us/product/brick-clog-5010203 Pricing is on-par for LEGO.
Archive link: https://archive.ph/GxEPr
[flagged]
Earlier discussion of the original (https://generalrobots.substack.com/p/benjies-humanoid-olympi...) article: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45609922
Their one year trial ran out and now further use of nav requires a subscription. It was like this when they bought the truck.
That was fun.
That's the flight of SN9 from 4 years ago, not the IFT9 flight.
"I like to look at the list of macOS Bash commands." Sigh. These are shell commands, not "Bash commands".
From the Register article: "Fans of 3D printing will no doubt be pleased to note that some of the parts (notably one of the large gears) came from a printer, but only because buying missing bits online tends to take…
This is the better link!
I owned cars with an AM radio for 30 years. I never used it. I've now owned cars without an AM radio for 10 years. I don't miss it.
I had a new car that also came with a Sirius radio and 3 months free. I tried it, but found it often dropped out while driving through forested roads in my area. That made it annoying to listen to. I stopped using it.
It is not available on my Pixel 8 Pro, arguably the newest current Android device.
"Tens of thousands of people probably use it every day without thinking about it." Probably tens of millions at this point.
Not just someone, but rather Tim Dodd, aka Everyday Astronaut.
When making the comparison, don't forget to tally the effects and emmisions of drilling, pumping, refining, and delivering oil and gasoline to the point-of-sale.
More like "the danger of thinking you can trivially validate user-supplied input" before evaluating the string.
I see this is improved in today's Nightly Demo link, but I still find the result too low fidelity.
I noticed that all of the New York City metropolitan area was replaced with a single angled line, cutting off several large islands supporting a few million in population.
That link is CGI.
Looks like the peices from the game Ploy. https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/1591/ploy
Yes, the List of numbers page is inadequate. When I give a monetary gift, I like to make it start with an interesting number. And then I ask the recipient (e.g., my kids, or neices/nephews, etc) if they can figure out…
Sorry, that's not obscure!
I kept the installer for the last free version of SketchUp around for exactly this reason.