It's not a VR game by default, although I think there's a mod or a VR version or something.
Badabinski
I love the thing about the bees. I remember doing the exact same thing multiple times. I eventually learned that you should leave them on the catwalk on the side of the ship and then run to grab them once the ship is leaving (since you're safe as long as you're on the ship somewhere, you'll just be teleported inside with whatever you're carrying).
Also, the airhorn is great. I think I like the hairdryer even more because it's louder, and I think it's fun that you can recharge it to get more VRRRRRRRs out of it.
Huh, sounds like a neat twist on the accelerator driven subcritical reactor. I've no idea what the viability will be, but it also seems like a nice way to generate useful isotopes for nuclear medicine and shit.
EDIT: ah, it's actually a pretty old idea, it predates the accelerator reactor concept by quite a bit.
I'm on my early thrities. I scored 1, I believe. I don't think I've ever recorded music off of the radio. I had CDs as a child, and then Napster, Limewire, and Limewire's degen cousin Bearshare came along and made recording shit off of the radio unnecessary. I'm pretty sure I've used a portable cassette player, although I doubt it was a Walkman. It was probably some cheap Chinese shit.
Also, this is very Facebook and I feel weird for responding. I'll blame it on being half awake.
EDIT: oh, the rules have changed. If we're only counting the past 12 months, then 18, I think? I own a physical dictionary and encyclopedia, although I've no idea where they are.
I love Lethal Company :) It's so fun and silly, and it has ridiculously deep mechanics that keep it interesting to play for hundreds and thousands of hours. I've been playing it solo for a while now and it's a really good challenge.
Briar, perhaps?
Regardless, I feel your pain about shit you're using being co-opted by shitheads or just something undesirable.
Just default Gboard. It's not pleasant, but it's good enough for most of what I do.
Eh, I'm fine with man pages. I looked at tldr before, but I've been using the command line for many things almost exclusively for like 10+ years now. I usually just need the reference details.
Manpages are great though? They're not the best if you need examples, but as a reference for the behavior of flags? I love'em.
I genuinely use vim inside of termux on a daily basis. I dunno if I'm sick in the head or what, but I kinda like vim on my phone.
Possibly incorrect summary: Android is moving from a bazaar development style to a cathedral development style if I understand it correctly.
He boot too big for he got damn feet!
I miss /r/boottoobig. Thanks for posting some poetry here.