

for what it’s worth matrix has worked well for us. it’s apparently a bitch to set up though.


for what it’s worth matrix has worked well for us. it’s apparently a bitch to set up though.


now do the other ones


soundn like a problem with your friends then. who doesn’t love a stoat?


you mean unlike the tools discord has replaced, such as “mumble”, “ventrilo”, “roger wilco” and “trillian”?
chains are worse for the road and can also come loose at high speed. they’re for getting unstuck, not for general driving.
70% of cars here use studded tires. they’re very useful in wet ice or black ice conditions, which happen a lot here.
here the main takeaway from studies is that the fewer cars have studded tires, the smoother the road surface becomes, which increases the amount of accidents in bad weather. if less than 50% of cars use studded tires the roads become too smooth in winter.
probably because they do it wrong
studded tires are a legal requirement here in some parts of the country and the roads are no worse for it
your writing overall is good! it’s just a matter of information priority.
here’s a tip, dunno how applicable it is but i use it when writing technical documentation:
for each step, explain to yourself why you’re doing it the way you are. if it turns out you caused the step to be needed, rather than it being required, you probably need to rethink, or at least add the explanation to the text.
this guide, and the previous one, have a lot of weird superfluous steps. like, why use a command that includes nvim and then ask people to change it instead of just saying “edit the file”? why symlink systemd stuff to your own home directory?
the info is good, but having to separate the actually useful stuff from things that are specific to your config makes it less useful.
for some, yeah. depends on your use case.