patchwork
“hyper-accelerates the aging of all plaforms” that’s a funny way to spell “planned obsolescence” but you do you
i just cut my own hair and do what i want with it, tbh
that’s from the cover/title art for the games Every Extend Extra and Every Extend Extra Extreme! i used to play the latter a bunch on my old xb360
honestly, i started the demo, and while the gameplay wasn’t bad, the characters and story didn’t grab me at all, and i lost interest almost immediately. maybe i’ll snag it in a year or two, after the GOTY, during a sale
that’s fair. it’s also easier for me to repair and modify my synth if i’m the one building it, which, chipocalypse-scale disruptions aside, makes the whole thing a little more future proof. and if this is the only synth i get, then i’d need to be able to repair it.
my rule for my own rack is that i have to solder at least part of every single module (and now that i’m set up for surface mount work, i’ll be able to build even more :3:3:3), and i’d think this would be the same
not sure about apt, but with apt-get the default behavior for upgrade is to hold back packages with new dependencies that are not currently installed. in that case, running sudo apt-get upgrade --with-new-pkgs
should get those packages upgraded as well, assuming that dependency conflicts aren’t a factor, too
i think it’s something the admins can toggle — it seems to be turned off for all of blahaj and a few other instances. i can’t seem to find mention of it in the official lemmy docs, but it’s discussed in a few threads on their github, so maybe it’s just an option in the admin interface somewhere?