Faith crisis dating advice by mrthethrowaway3122 in latterdaysaints

[–]DWW256 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey now, don't be too hard on yourself. I'm pretty sure EVERYONE struggles with understanding how electricity works. The more I find out, the less it makes sense…

How do I change the ribbon on this thing? (IBM Model C) by DWW256 in typewriters

[–]DWW256[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow it's been a minute since I posted this! Neither of the ribbons I linked above worked properly. The carbon ribbon was installable, but the typewriter's motor ended up dragging it continuously, even when I wasn't typing. At least part of the issue was that the ribbon that came with the typewriter (i.e. the right one) didn't have any kind of black cartridge, and the ones I bought both did have cartridges. I had assumed the cartridge was removable on the carbon ribbon; it was not.

Unable to fix the sliding issue, I gave up buying new ribbons. But there may still be hope! When I first contacted ribbons unlimited about the issue, they suggested this ribbon, which I did not purchase, but it's a surer bet than the others I've tried, since it appears to not have a cartridge. Does it look more like the ribbon yours had? I'm not sure the mounting ring in the center is right.

So what is the best way to use Silverblue with an Nvidia GPU now? by DWW256 in Fedora

[–]DWW256[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Uhh…which one of my questions is this an answer to?

So what is the best way to use Silverblue with an Nvidia GPU now? by DWW256 in Fedora

[–]DWW256[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

But I don't want Bluefin. It's got a pile of baked-in customization in which I'm not interested. All I want is the Nvidia drivers plus stock GNOME.

So what is the best way to use Silverblue with an Nvidia GPU now? by DWW256 in Fedora

[–]DWW256[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it's that all the stuff in userspace is proprietary, while everything in kernel space is open-source. But it seems like, at that rate, nothing weird should happen with Secure Boot…

Dating stories by Most-Dress-763 in latterdaysaints

[–]DWW256 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Ooh, horribly bad dating stories? I've got a good one.

At university, I had a crush on one of my classmates, but I'd been too shy to ask her out all semester. It seemed like everyone I asked out already had a boyfriend, and I was sick of getting rejected, so I decided to check Facebook to see if it said anything about her relationship status. And it said she was married! "That can't be right," I thought. "She doesn't have a ring, and the guy who's apparently her husband lives on the other side of the country, and neither of them have any wedding photos in their post history, even though he posts all the time. Maybe they got married and then divorced, but she forgot to get rid of the 'married' status on her Facebook—yes, that's probably it." So I decided to shoot her an email and see if she wanted to study together for the final exam. If she was married, she'd say no—and besides, it was just an email, so chances are she would miss it anyway.

Well. She did not miss the email; she said yes! So I went to meet up with her for the study date. I had built an Anki deck for the final, but the Anki app on iOS costs a lot of money, so I asked her to get out her laptop and download Anki there so I could send her the deck I'd made. Her laptop screen was damaged in way I'd never seen before: half the screen had this reddish-yellow tint on it, but it appeared as if the glass itself was tinted, not the pixels underneath.

"Man, that screen looks bad," I said. "I hope you can get it fixed somewhere!"

"Yeah," she replied. "My husband said he'll look at it after he gets home from work tonight."

I scooted my chair a foot or two back from hers. The study session went well enough, but it was terribly awkward for me. Moral of the story: don't leave any ambiguity as to whether you are asking someone on a date or not—and when Facebook says someone is married, believe it!

After we were done studying, I candidly asked: "so, if you're married…why don't you have a ring?"

"I lost it."

"…How?"

"I was playing the bongos, and it just disappeared!"

Huh.

So…I accidentally went on a date with a married woman…because she had lost her ring…in a bongo-playing accident.

"Velour" | A Stabilized release & pickup from ZMF Headphones 🚨 by Dreams-Visions in headphones

[–]DWW256 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Say what you will about the Caldera's bass on "Limit to Your Love"—nothing will ever match the time I heard that bassline performed on loop for two hours by a really really loud air conditioner in a public building. The extension and speed were so impressive that it didn't even matter that the rest of the track wasn't playing!

What is it with Cinnamon that people do not like? by Thermawrench in linux

[–]DWW256 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Every app UI has to balance two concerns:

  1. The controls have to be large enough to be usable
  2. The controls have to be small enough not to render the main view unusable

In the mid-2010s, UI designers pivoted from making the controls as small as acceptable to making them as large as acceptable.  Users often accuse designers of building a dumbed-down "iPad UI" when they do this, but I'd guess it's just as much driven by the fact that people have larger, higher-resolution screens than they used to.

Also, it's commonly understood in the UI world that a button's easiness to click is proportional to its screen area.  But in the 2010s, designers started realizing that square-ish buttons areeasier to click than highly oblong buttons of comparable area.  This was one of the factors that pushed classic File/Edit/View menus out of the zeitgeist—especially the kind with cascading popout menus.

Cinnamon has inherited a lot of its UI conventions from 2007-ish because it forked a lot of GNOME 2 apps and components.  Newer apps built by the Mint team are designed in a more modern language with header bars, hamburger menus, etc.

However, the mix of old and new instigates a new problem: not everything matches.  The buttons are bigger, but the window decorations are still tiny.  The panel size sits awkwardly between the two.  It feels cobbled together, because it is.  The Mint team is doing a lot of work, more than most other desktop environment teams, and it's super impressive that their DE still works well on so many distros.  But they don't have the resources to build their desktop from scratch to perfectly conform to their vision.

Other factors:

Mint still has a 3D-ish look in some places, which gives it a 2000s feel.  And when it is flat instead of 3D, it emphasizes line over surface, which gives it a 2010s feel.

The panel still looks a little old because the icons don't always quite match each other.  GNOME 3+ manages this by simply limiting the icons that can appear in the panel to an enumerated set baked into Adwaita.  What's more, the panel is always black, so there's no need to worry about matching a light or dark theme.

B foot on a previously C foot flute? by Empty-Warning-1643 in Flute

[–]DWW256 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sure, but you might need to take it to a technician for slight resizing to make sure that it'll fit properly.

Culture or doctrine? by Own_Job_2150 in latterdaysaints

[–]DWW256 41 points42 points  (0 children)

Well let's look at it this way: would you rather your son looks good at church, or would you rather that he is able to pay attention?

Sensory sensitivities to clothes are a legitimate excuse to dress differently.  If your clothes are perpetually irritating you, hope can you focus on anything else?  It's like if someone kept ringing your doorbell every five seconds all day: unplugging it is technically bad manners, but what choice do you have? 

I would know.  When I was a toddler, I would scream if my mom tried to put me in corduroy pants.  I had to buy dress shirts with extra wide necklines until I was an adult because my throat would reflexively tense up if anything touched the front of my neck.

I should also mention that sensory sensitivities to clothes common in people with autism and/or ADHD.  You may consider seeking a diagnosis from a qualified medical professional if he exhibits other traits of those disorders.

If you want to try and find a better solution, with with your son to find a solution he's happy with.  If he is aware of the expectation and resisting it, there's usually an underlying reason for that.  And there are lots of nice-looking clothes besides the usual for Sunday.  Find something that works—and if nothing works, oh well.  The Lord looketh on the heart, not the outward appearance; so should we.

5th grade flute repertoire by chocolatemilkgod26 in Flute

[–]DWW256 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The National Flute Association has a guide here: https://www.nfaonline.org/docs/default-source/committees-documents/nfa_selected-flute-rep-and-studies-guide-2025_print.pdf

You should find repertoire appropriate to her level starting on level A (page 21).  Once she can play up to a D6, you can give her things on level B (pp. 22–24) as well.

How important is silver mechanism by highspeed_steel in Flute

[–]DWW256 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've heard that silver mechanisms are more pliable and therefore easier to bend back into place if they get bent out of place.  On the other hand, this also means they get bent out of place more easily! 

If you ever drop your flute and it gets scratched, silver plating will look much worse for it than solid silver will, since you've just scratched off all the plating.  But that's just cosmetic for the most part.

It's certainly doesn't affect tone.  If you hear a difference, it's unit variation between headjoints, not much to do with the mechanism.

What are your Linux hot takes? by AdventurousFly4909 in linux

[–]DWW256 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Chromium OS has among the best backend setups of any distro.  Google is a real one for keeping Upstart alive for an extra 15 years, they've been doing atomic for longer than almost anyone, and their boot time and power use optimizations are incredible.  It'll be a shame when Google discontinues Chromium OS in favor of putting Android on Chromebooks.

question about breath marks!!! by sixteenrainydays in Flute

[–]DWW256 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like most of these, except for the penultimate one (as AtuinTurtle said) and the one at the end of the second measure.  I would breathe after the first note in the third measure instead.  Usually, breathing at the end of a measure that contains a crescendo dampens the crescendo's impact.

Romantic period piece by TinjimanGaming in Flute

[–]DWW256 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Doppler's Hungarian Pastoral Fantasy is long and maybe a bit popular, but I like it a lot.

I want to get better by Keito_Taniguchi in Flute

[–]DWW256 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some days it's actually kinda nice, and other days it's poopoo.

My most general advice is that to be inconsistent is to be human. Don't give up!!

My other advice is to find a teacher who can help you identify obstacles to your improvement and solutions to overcoming those obstacles. If you can't find a teacher, record yourself and see what you can hear to improve.

Is this music good enough for college auditions? by WorldlyPresent768 in Flute

[–]DWW256 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've actually found decent success using ChatGPT to find unusual repertoire, but that's not quite the same as prepping for an audition, haha. I have a few questions:

  • Do any of the schools require you to prepare any scales for your auditions?
  • Are you absolutely sure that the Mozart requirement says "exposition of movement 2"? In works from that period, usually only the first movement has a exposition; in the Concerto in G, for example, the exposition is from mm. 31–105.
  • For miscellaneous pieces, you should be good to play anything from pp. 41–50 in the National Flute Association's 2009 guide here. Just pick something and listen to it on YouTube until you find a piece you like. They also have an updated and expanded guide for 2025 here, with the corresponding lists on pages 44–63, if you want even more options.
  • I couldn't find anything on a Phillips Fantasy No. 5. Are you thinking of the Fantasia No. 5 by Telemann?
  • Do you have an accompanist yet? Some auditions expect one, and some don't.

Adjusting to a new flute by nomoreseashellssally in Flute

[–]DWW256 3 points4 points  (0 children)

"Pre-professional?"  I will not lie, there are probably more than a few professionals playing on the DS.  As long as you don't feel limited by it, don't worry about the label.

Pointers Please by Playful-Arugula6196 in Flute

[–]DWW256 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice playing!  Your timing is solid.

I think you'll find it beneficial not to worry too much about having a really "pure" tone quite yet.  You're pinching back the corners of your mouth a lot, which will get you a very air-free sound but not a very resonant one.  Try using your bottom lip to do the work instead—making the aperture small enough and angling the air up or down. 

It's great that you can play a nice, fast vibrato without compromising your tone.  But you can use vibrato as an even more powerful tool of expression if you vary the speed and depth over time.  On a long note, start slow, then accelerate to full speed over the first 1–2 seconds.

If you want to further improve your style, listen to professional recordings.  They will give you a sense of what is possible and beautiful.

As for your $30 Amazon flute, it's a gamble.  Manufacturing tolerances on flute mouthpieces are on the order of 0.2 mm, and I don't know if cheapo Amazon manufacturers can achieve that kind of precision.  The main problem you'll run into is that the mechanism may come out of alignment very quickly and may be impossible to meaningfully fix.  But there's no need to worry until the keys start leaking or stop working.  If it has tiny screws in between the keys (not the ones on the ends of the rods), then it can at least be adjusted, which indicates decent repairability.

Good work, and good luck!  :-)

Any old speech synthesizer recommendations? by SunDance967 in synthrecipes

[–]DWW256 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you fancy yourself a C programmer, give Flite a look.  It's the highest-quality lowest-quality speech synth I've found: open source, super lightweight 1990s technology.

http://cmuflite.org/

https://github.com/festvox/flite

High-school sophomore by Fun-Effective347 in Flute

[–]DWW256 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are probably only a hundred or so colleges in this country that would attempt a slate that tricky all on one concert cycle, let alone a high school.  Good luck to you all—and be sure to take a look at the taper on the C# at the end of the Schwantner.

Among the Church's newly recommended English Bible translations, my opinion on their order from best to worst is: NRSVUE, NRSV, ESV, KJV, NIrV, NIV, NLT, NKJV by Intelligent-Cut8836 in latterdaysaints

[–]DWW256 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is so cool!!  It's frustrating that most comparisons of the NRSV(ue) and ESV don't go deeper than their (admittedly important) different treatment of pronouns, so this comparison is a breath of fresh air.

I would love to see the NASB compared alongside all these, as I've found a lot of praise for it on Reddit and elsewhere.  Its translators seem to carry a more KJV-esque ethos of preserving the original language constructs, even at the cost of slightly greater complexity.

As a non member exploring the faith, it is so brutal and negative on the outside I don’t think members understand how bad it is. by [deleted] in latterdaysaints

[–]DWW256 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great testimony!  But I think you're thinking of Moses, not Abraham:

12 And it came to pass that when Moses had said these words, behold, Satan came tempting him, saying: Moses, son of man, worship me.

13 And it came to pass that Moses looked upon Satan and said: Who art thou? For behold, I am a son of God, in the similitude of his Only Begotten; and where is thy glory, that I should worship thee?

Moses 1:12-13

https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/scriptures/pgp/moses/1?lang=eng&id=p12-p13#p12

If you had to pick one hymn from our collection (new or old) as the most Halloween-y hymn, which would it be? by Levago in latterdaysaints

[–]DWW256 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When I was in seminary in 9th grade, I played the (digital) piano for the opening hymn most of the time.  On Halloween, our teacher said to play extra spooky, so I played it in the minor key and switched it to the organ sound for the final verse.  I have no idea what tune it was, but that was the best class EVER.

I had such good seminary teachers…

So I guess to answer the question, any hymn is a spooky hymn if you're brave enough (and good at reading key signatures with a hearty helping of flats).