@ramin_hal9001@emacs.ch I use the same C-x b as well.
I just like static access points for some files (such as todo.org, repeat.org, chatgpt, dashboard, etc...) things I refer to many times a day. I set it so that I can flip through the tabs very quickly back and forth so it's generally faster than C-x b and typing a few letters to bring up the relevant buffer. Also, flipping through them, I realise I lose track of things sometimes in my head and a visual reminder when I'm flipping through allows me to remember to do something on that buffer.
#Emacs tabs questions:
1) How many tabs (not buffers) do you usually have open?
2) Are there a certain amount that you name for buffers you refer to several times a day?
3) What keybinds (if any) did you set to flip through them quickly?
4) Which tab system/package do you use?
5) If you use Mastodon.el, do you have a dedicated tab? More than one?
Slate: How the Streaming Era Turned Music Into Sludge
https://www.wired.com/story/plaintext-how-the-streaming-era-turned-music-into-sludge/
It's a point of view that a lot of people can agree with.
One thing: Endel is mentioned in the piece. The author uses it and I actually also use it. I've been using it to help me sleep and block out the city noise for about a year and a half. Honestly, it's been fantastic. I actually love it. I've tried their "focus" stuff, but that just doesn't do it for me. In fact, I don't usually ever have background music. Last night, I was listening to music and it's all that I was doing. I was focused on it. I wasn't reading, or writing, or checking Mastodon - nothing like that. I was simply listening to music. It was an experience. The whole "background music" while I work thing isn't for me. I can't concentrate and it just sounds confusing.
If content is not available anywhere, then the copyright holder can't claim any economic damages if it is copied without authorization.
@Pat That's a good point.
@Pat @CardboardRobot It is and, so far, it looks like it will probably remain legal. But, even though I'm sitting all the way in France, there's no way I'm going to do absolutely nothing to try to help a little bit to keep it so - just in case.
@Pat @natharari Thank you, I wasn’t thinking along those lines. Happy to be corrected and reminded.
In jurisdictions that offer initiative ballot measures, petitions are the first step.
Way back when, when petitions were actual pieces of paper that you signed, I would sign almost every one that somebody showed me just to support the process, whether I agreed with it or not.
(ps - Mifepristone is still legal and will remain so.)
How Reality May Be a Sum of All Possible Realities - Richard Feynman’s path integral is a powerful prediction machine and a philosophy. Physic... - https://www.wired.com/story/how-reality-may-be-a-sum-of-all-possible-realities/ #science/physicsandmath #formulaone #science
@bellaxtsepi You're welcome! It's a great book. He also has one of the best podcasts once a week since years. Just look for his name in Apple Podcasts or Spotify or whatever and you'll find it. He has fascinating guests every week on a huge range of topics for very in depth discussions not just about physics but sociology, anthropology, chemistry, biology, and so much more. I think you'd like it a lot.
@natharari thank you for the rec, definitely following and on the hunt for that book.
Let's see: I've lived in 9 US states (Mass, NY, Pennsylvania, Washington DC, Virginia, Maryland, California, Arizona, Vermont) and England, Belgium, France, Israel, and Japan.
I used to be a news photographer in Washington DC during the Clinton years. I've worked for Congressional Quarterly, UPI, Scripps Howard News Service.
Now I live again in Paris.