But only if its been completely demagnetised.
Law, medicine and finance sectors could be among most affected, according to organisation’s employment outlook
Sapiens author tells Geneva summit proliferation of fake people on social media could lead to collapse in democracy
Smith, the department spokesperson, pointed out that people in prison have access to computers for educational programs and legal research, and that “allowing these types of printed materials presents a substantial risk of misuse” and poses a security threat.
source: https://www.themarshallproject.org/2023/06/20/ohio-odrc-prison-book-ban-java-hitler
There are others, but I like all of these:
- nvim.focus
- null-ls
- pounce
- vim-fugiitive, obviously
- vim-projectionist (awesome for TDD)
- (Better) Vim Tmux Resizer
This playlist might be helpful: Smart Note Taking (Obsidian & Zettelkasten)
<ctrl-O>
- to open a note. The fuzzy finder makes this super fast, if you name your notes in a way you'll remember later (SEO!).<ctrl-E>
- switch between reader and edit mode (I almost always edit with external editor (Vim) any way, so I nearly always want the note in reader mode. In settings, you can make this the default)<ctrl-shift-v>
- (custom binding) open current note in external editor
You don't have to already be inside of Neovim.
Tmux 3.2's new display-popup command is a neat way to access the telescope picker when you are outside of Neovim.
source: https://github.com/camgraff/telescope-tmux.nvim#use-with-tmux-display-popup
You can just set up a keybinding, and a new instance of Neovim will start in a popup window inside of Tmux.
There's a fractional delay while Neovim starts up, but I find it well within tolerance, personally.
If you're using Neovim as well as tmux, telescope-tmux is pretty awesome for switching sessions, windows and more.
I've been thinking about buying a Summit for some time, but I'm worried that its been around for quite a while - if I buy one, Novation are bound to release a successor a week later.
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
A look at Roland's System 100 from 1975, their first foray in (semi) modular synthesis.
(This is not my video)