
Yeah I relate a lot with you on that. But I never managed to actually keep at it. I've tried 5 times to pick up the guitar again after giving it up, and always failed.
That didn't really improve my mental health and self-esteem, ngl. So yeah, all props to you!

Is there one for "hugs okay, but I'm not talking"?

If you need to dual boot, you should also use a dedicated disk to prevent Windows from deleting your Linux. It has been known to happen

What, no, socks are step one, while you're waiting for your prescription.

Yeah, didn't give any money to McDonalds in years, but it's not because I'm boycotting. It's just bad,and there are better alternatives everywhere

Yeah, I hang dry most of my clothes, but I use a dryer for towels because they get really coarse otherwise, and bed sheets because I don't really have somewhere to hang them

The worst bug I had on my car had the onboard computer not starting, and the screen remaining black. It meant I had: no GPS, no music, no backup camera, and no parking sensor.
But apart from that, the car was driving perfectly normal, and all the other features were working as expected.

To be fair, historically speaking, Europe's borders have been all but peaceful.

Well, I'm from Northern France, and "fattening" is kinda accurate. Still tasty tho

Your stop signs are more French than the stop signs in France

Latency is abysmal though

I'm French, and honestly, I don't think tanks would roll into Paris like you said. France would 100% go fascist as well...

In my experience it can be alleviated with the help of the game's mechanics.
For example Pandemic is a terrible game for that (it's a good game, but completely has the default you mentioned) because all the information is public, you know what cards the other players have, and in terms of mechanics, each character has its own power, but it's really easy to have everything in mind at the same time. So an experienced player will have a good vision of the strategy and will possibly railroad everyone.
On the other hand, games like hanabi hide some parts of the information, so a player cannot really know enough to do the strategy by themselves.
If you make the player characters very different from one another, you go in that direction as well. I know how to play my Gloomhaven character, and I mostly know what the other characters do, but I don't know the exact actions they have, it's too much. Same with Aeon's End, the more the game goes on, the more different the decks end up.
So yeah, in a nutshell, there are mechanics a game can use to prevent a single player to have too much of an influence on the game

Not sure about Frosthaven, but Gloomhaven is on Tabletop Simulator, and there is an actual digital version on Steam.

discombobulate

You can do both. FreshRSS for example allows you to subscribe to it like you would subscribe to any RSS feed

Wow, thanks! It was really fun to build

No, it's a EFI app I developed in Rust that does a query over multicast UDP and uses the result to select which EFI app (Windows bootloaded (yeah I know...) Or systemd-boot to start Arch)
There's nothing related to proxmox itself, it's just there that I host my LXC with the service that responds to the quey.

I boot on a custom EFI app to control my dualboot (instead of systemd-boot or grub) that asks a service on my proxmox server which OS I'm supposed to boot.
Overkill, but it allows me to control my dual-boot without a keyboard in my computer (because it's a Bluetooth keyboard so I can't really use it in grub anyway)

Okay, but to be fair, metro 13 is not a good experience.