@gordoooo_z Yeah, I remember it had some limitation in that department, that made it not too good for imitating sounds like brass and wind instruments, it could be worked around to a degree, but still…
@gordoooo_z Oh, yes, always forget that Fedi is like a minefield sometimes, someone defederates someone else and long thread is like riddled with holes 😅
Yes, it reminded me of our conversation about Electribe and compact MIDI-keyboards. I know, you have the one with the pink-tinted top plate, same as one I've had, but it's still funny 😂
@gordoooo_z
Is that you on the photo? 😂
(Judging by gear used)
@neural_meduza Чтобы возрождать там демократические вечевые традиции? 🤔
Хотя об этом рано пока…
@XOrgFoundation
> nonprofit
Tax evasion!
@Moon This topped even me usually choosing "Name" for a name 🤣
@neural_meduza
> Игорь Северянин, который хочет убить всех пользователей Instagram? Зачем? Чем он плох?
Ну и в чём он не прав? 😈
@amerika Then I grew a habit of using thymus for cooking meat, soups and other stuff, problem is, in Russian when thyme is used in different contexts, even for cooking, it's called differently — «тимьян». But eventually my suspicions started growing and I decided to check out that can and was like: "Damn, but it's the same herb, who the f decided to use two very different names?!" 🤣
@amerika Ha-ha-ha-ha! I think I should try oregano tea, in food I can barely smell it (probably something individual like some people can smell asparagus, some can't), but with tea it might be different.
I have a fun story like that too — a friend of mine gave me a can of thyme to put into tea, it's called «чай с чабрецом» — pretty popular in Russia, but I don't like tea with that, it's pretty strong, kills all other flavours. So this can was sitting in the kitchen drawer for a year or so.
@amerika It is! I do like messing with herbs and spices, I think everyone who enjoys cooking does.
You're right, working together is the key, to be honest, I was tempted adding basil to the yesterday's mix, I do enjoy adding it to tea as of recent, it's an essential cooking ingredient for things like tomato and cheese salad and even strawberry lemonade, but adding it to tea is new to me. In the end I decided against it — once you add too many ingredients it's easy to mess up.
@thor Agreed 🤝
@thor Sure, but Soviet Union didn't exist then 😂
Finland was even part of Russian Empire so it's not impossible, but Soviet Union… It's hard to believe that they would manufacture something for the army after the Winter War, so when that was, in 1930s probably?
That's why I asked, I thought maybe there's some interesting story behind it.
@thor
> boots for the Soviet army
For the army in particular? After the Winter War? Sounds hard to believe 🤔
@PurpCat Whoah, Pentium Pro in PC98! 😲
@PurpCat BTW, I have a dual Pentium Pro Siemens workstation sitting under my Mac Pro, maybe I should try putting it to use. It's still i686, I'm not sure though that newer Linux kernels will run on it, they definitely don't have PAE and all that 🤔
@PurpCat
For general purpose computing — yes, without proper optimization the whole thing didn't make any sense.
I remember when Pentium Pro was released, it had tons of innovative features and code written specifically for it ran well, but old programs and especially games sucked ass compared to similarly clocked older Pentium, it was such a failure — people hated it🤣
With PII they have mitigated it and old programs ran better.
@PurpCat @theorytoe Wow, Itanium, neat stuff! I thought it was garbage when they were still in use, but now that I did more reading, the idea behind it was actually quite interesting, but too complicated. AMD meanwhile went all in on oversimplification and started eating into Intel's main market so they had to give up on this expensive hobby of theirs.
None
Just in case: DMs/PMs simply don't exist on this instance as concept — don't use them, use the other instance if you absolutely have to, or send an email to any address at m0xEE.Net or .Com or .Org, but I prefer keep most communication public.