Not that much, really I moved from Brazil to Portugal and I was surprised by both the culture similarity and the number of brazillians around
Still, when I arrived the closest people I knew were 2000km away hhaahaha, so even small changes can be challenging at times
I’m also in my late 20s, and I’m an immigrant (changed continents)
When I meet new people, ai usually have a hard time coming up with something to talk about, so I had (still have) a hard time making new friends.
What helped me was to have continuous contact with people in a focused environment, for example: with around 6 months of office attendance I started warming up to my new colleagues (which eventually became friends), even though we were usually talking about work back then, we started to talk about it less and less up to a point where we don’t even work together anymore, but keep in touch
I found another of such environments in sports practices as well: don’t want to talk about anything? Fine, let’s just keep this ball rolling back and forth" but then eventually (again after a few months of continuous contact with the same group of people) things started to warm up a little
So to sum it up I’d say: patience is key, it usually takes a while before prople start to get along well
On the risk of looking like a lunatic philosopher, yes, I’d argue that gravity doesn’t exist.
Even if energy is not manmade, the concept of energy is, or in other words: we invented this concept in order to more easily understand phenomena around us.
I see a lot of replies saying that “energy is in all things and is immutable”, but we (at least I) can imagine a scenario where someone invents a whole new system to describe nature which might not use the concept of energy at all (or any other concept you choose, such as gravity). The nature can be the same but the way we describe it can vary wildly (more likely beyond human comprehension).
David Graeber’s “Debt” goes to some extent about this,
He traces philosophy back to a few factors such as urbanization, imperialism (i.e. Greece, India and China were great empires at that time) and the advent of coinage at the time (which allegedly was a way ro finance armies and finance more imperialism)
Interesting, I don’t know this one, would you have a link?
Shower with your dad simulator is not a bad game at all, it’s very funny and properly implementes
It still is a “trash” game though (so I thought it was worth mentioning)
i
nsensitiver
recursivel
enamesI also like to use:
I
(capital i) to skip binary files, if I’m in a folder with heavy images/videos/etcc 3
to show 3 lines around the matched textFun fact: I use “git bash shell” over windows’ cmd just because of grep
grep -irl "some text that the file would have"
(Obiously only work for text files, but that’s enough to cover 90% of cases for me)
Yup, the other comments helped me understand the idea better, I definitely cannot relate :/
Not like you described, but some days I try so much of the food as I go that when I finish I’m already satisfied (though I would definitely not describe it as “not wanting to eat”)
I would disagree on the basis that Linux upgrades don’t require hardware upgrades (unless you have a very low end hardware that’s hanging by a thread already)
For example, I don’t remember seeing all this fuss about upgrading when people were moving from 8.1 to 10 (but it could just be me on my bubble)
I don’t like the announcement on a meme community But this does looks like one of the few nice LLM applications
Soap! (Just kidding go for the other replier suggestion)