I’ve been wanting to try warthunder but I’ve been turned off the the micro-transaction model. Would you still recommend?
I’ve played other milsims like arma, was wanting something with better air vehicle usage
I’ve been wanting to try warthunder but I’ve been turned off the the micro-transaction model. Would you still recommend?
I’ve played other milsims like arma, was wanting something with better air vehicle usage
Whic TCG? I sold some old pokemon cards at a shop, was surprised to learn that anime cards were very popular now
That game made my head hurt but I so wish I could play it again for the first time. It was so fun
I’ve been playing a LOT of arma 3 rpg’s. So fun trying to smuggle drugs across the map before the police figure out what’s going on.
Next year I’ll probably move over to a larger playbase game with similar gameplay loop, maybe EVE online
I just finished my thesis last semester, it’s a huge milestone. Good luck on yours!
End the workaholic streak and get back to my hobbies, maybe even make new friends via hobbies
As scary as the lockdown was, it was an interesting year of protests for BLM and labor movements. Once everyone had a lot of time on their hands, they started to take action on import topics.
Now I feel like most people are back to the grind, and as a whole we don’t have the time to quickly make changes we want to see
I am struggling to find a source, but the tradeoff between road and railways scales with congestion. The infrastructure needed for moving 1000 trucks per hour on a road is much more expensive than 1 truck per hour. Rails, however, scale much more easily, as the freightline is typically closely managed already.
I think this is the best one. It’s a real, enjoyable gift recommendation that doesn’t sidestep the parent’s concerns about their kid
Very concise answer. Linux was intimidating for me aswell when I first dual-booted it, and I didn’t understand it the first time around. But getting started in it was a lot of fun, and every time I came back, it got easier, until eventually it was the same for me as Windows
Ads work differently than that. At least good ones do.
A good ad is almost imperceptible in presenting an idea to you. I have no doubt that people that are bombarded with ads that they say they “ignore” are still influenced over not having seen the ad at all
I think Lemmy has steadily been getting better. For having a good conversation, I think this is the best platform, everyone here seems like actual people I would run into irl.
What I think is still lacking is a way to search up anecdotal evidence on something, that I still heavily rely on reddit for. For instance if I type in google “french press coffee brew time” the only valuable results with the in-depth info I’m looking for are usually youtube videos, which are too long, or reddit threads. So I usually just end up adding site:reddit.com for all those type of search results.
But lemmy is getting good. I could see it replacing some info sources for the more tech-y niches I follow in the near future
1000% agree. But to Lemmy’s credit, I found a greate niche community of linux and programming enthusiasts, plus I’ve noticed I run into Europeans more in the wild on here.
I think the fediverse has it’s benefits. Still not a full replacement. Truthfully I don’t think it will ever be, those niche communities will always end up being hosted where it suits them best.
Specifically, I think the abilty to make hydrogren from renewable resources at large-scale will change everything. Hydrogen fuel cells are more space efficient, and require less toxic manufacturing, when compared to current renewable energy generation and storage methods. If hydrogen is seen as cheaper or more green than other power sources, it will change the market completely.
Hydrogen generation is also an active research area, and just this year they’ve have some promising results for renewable hydrogen.
Chiming in, Michigan has variables rates depending on time of day, and range from $0.12-$0.18 per kWh