

I checked it out. I stopped after one and a half minutes because I didn’t have a clue what’s going on. I only then saw that I am looking at part 2 of a series. I suggest to make that clear, when you post a link here.


I checked it out. I stopped after one and a half minutes because I didn’t have a clue what’s going on. I only then saw that I am looking at part 2 of a series. I suggest to make that clear, when you post a link here.


Having read the Akira comic books in my teenage years, I never knew that this is the origin of all those diagonal elevators in games. I just assumed them to be a thing in the real world and never questioned that up to now.
Crazy that so many games adopted it. The comments on YouTube mentionmany more games than featured in the video.


It’s funny but also tempting me 😄
From a previous comment of mine:
After more than 15 years of Kubuntu I installed Tumbleweed a few years (two?) ago, because it offers a rolling release, system snapshots and KDE.
Having a job and a family, I do not have the time to tinker anymore, so I expect things to work smoothly out-of-the-box nowadays.
Tumbleweed let me down in this respect.
Once I had to completely reinstall the system because the snapshots filled the system partition during an update, which made it unable to start KDE. I could roll back from the terminal to the previous snapshot, but couldn’t figure out how to remedy the problem, except for using a greater partition and reinstalling.
And just a few days ago KDE (and many applications, when used in LXDE) wouldn’t start, because of version mismatches (caused by an incomplete update?) that broke the linkage of qt libraries. To resolve it I had to make a decision between two packages (tlp vs tuned) to finish the update, even though I hadn’t installed those manually and didn’t know anything about them.
Besides those problems I find the administration suboptimal, with the divide between the Interfaces of Yast and the KDE settings. I didn’t manage to get my Brother network printer to work (except via direct USB connection), which worked out of the box with my android phone.
I plan to try the fedora atomic desktop soonish.


So, as the other poster said, they are held together by tendons. But what is between the bones?
Not good, not terrible.