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122 votes
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MEUTE - Come Together (Henrik Schwarz rework ft. The Young ClassX, 2023)
8 votes -
Wirtz pumps are really clever
16 votes -
The race to mine the bottom of the ocean
13 votes -
Video interview - science fiction author - Lois McMaster Bujold who wrote the award winning Vorkosigan series, the Curse of Challion and sequels and more
7 votes -
Video reveals crucial details of LAPD ignoring robbery to catch Togetic in Pokémon Go
34 votes -
Caroline Polachek: Tiny Desk Concert (2023)
19 votes -
Paul Gregory - Heavy Metal Painter
8 votes -
Graduated and moving to an apartment in a major city in the US, advice/tips?
I graduated in the spring and spent the last few months at home with family. I'm hoping to find an apartment/job in a major US city working as a legal assistant or paralegal. I've never rented...
I graduated in the spring and spent the last few months at home with family. I'm hoping to find an apartment/job in a major US city working as a legal assistant or paralegal.
I've never rented before, so I have questions, but due to circumstances related to the ones pushing me away from staying at home any longer, I don't have any parents or older siblings to ask for help, so I'm hoping to crowdsource wisdom here. I have specific questions, but also happy to hear any general advice for someone renting an apartment for the first time.
Some relevant context:
- Studio apartment is nonnegotiable. I don't know anyone I trust enough to be my roommate. If that weren't enough, I'm one of the only people still wearing a mask and trying not to get COVID, so it's gotta be a studio for me to be able to relax.
- I'm looking for a walkable neighborhood and good public transit in addition to affordability, so really looking at Chicago and Philly right now.
- I love to cook, but I know studios often have really lackluster kitchens. Hoping to find one with a usable amount of counterspace.
Those questions I had:
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If you offer to pay a landlord the cost of the lease in full, is it typical for the landlord to waive the requirement that you provide proof of employment, or if you asked them to waive that, would they be likely to say yes? I would really like to take some time off, and coming home was intended to be that, but toxic family means I've just been stressed the whole time, so being able to get a place without needing a job right off the bat would be a fantastic setup to make sure this new start goes well. (If I save up part-time earnings for the next 2-3 months, I'll have enough to pay a lease on a $1200 studio in full, furnish it with the necessities, and feed myself.)
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Recently I realized that when apartments are listed as unfurnished, that means no bed or mattress either. (I kind of see now why futons are a thing.) How do people usually address this issue? Do you buy a mattress and bed frame with the expectation that you'll take it with you whenever you move out to the next apartment?
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Since I don't live in the city I'll be moving to, I most likely won't be able to see the apartment in person before committing. Any particular ideas on how I could handle this or what I should be wary of? I've heard of services where you can pay someone to show up to a tour and video call you so you can follow along (https://www.gandertour.com/). $50 doesn't seem too steep, but I don't know if that specific service is trustworthy, or if there's a cheaper or simpler way to deal with this.
Those are my questions, and like I said above, any advice not 100% related to these questions is welcome too!
38 votes -
Climbing dangerous cracks in Czechia with Adam Ondra
8 votes -
Attosecond lasers explained (2023 Nobel Prize in physics)
6 votes -
Why don't cities use hexagon blocks?
15 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
22 votes -
An audacious plan to halt the Internet's enshittification - Cory Doctorow
53 votes -
The war in Ukraine is heightening tensions between Russians and Norwegians living on Svalbard | Focus on Europe
8 votes -
Coding Adventure: Simulating Fluids
11 votes -
Can you beat Final Fantasy with a White Mage? | VG Myths
6 votes -
Supporters of clubs in Norway have demonstrated against the use of a video assistant referee, while Sweden continues to hold out against introduction
7 votes -
Premier League to test video game-inspired camera angle this weekend
8 votes -
A comprehensive guide to making P.F. Chang's Mongolian Beef at home
10 votes -
Fritz Haber, the man who killed millions and saved billions
17 votes -
The good ship Packrat (Starfield)
9 votes -
The Brazillian who nutted in his Dreamcast: Leonam's journey
7 votes -
Is acupuncture, like, legit now?
I remember a time when acupuncture was universally condemned as bogus pseudoscience, and I was under the impression that that remained true. However, looking for negative takes on acupuncture on...
I remember a time when acupuncture was universally condemned as bogus pseudoscience, and I was under the impression that that remained true. However, looking for negative takes on acupuncture on YouTube is almost impossible now. Almost everything is overwhelmingly positive, including content produced by medical doctors. I could only find a few negative videos. They were short, not very good, and not very popular.
This is a sincere question: am I really out of touch, or has everyone gone crazy?
Anecdotally, I did acupuncture without believing in it, and it didn't do anything for me.
30 votes -
Analyzing Frank Herbert's Dune from an architectural perspective
10 votes -
Appropriate for spooky season. Venus: Welcome to her nightmare
3 votes -
Timnit Gebru - Eugenics and the promise of utopia through AGI
6 votes -
Sir Curse - Hitchhiker Disco (2023)
9 votes -
Slavoj Žižek on how toilets embody ideology
10 votes -
Chappell Roan - Red Wine Supernova (2023)
3 votes -
Bottles Next: a new chapter
7 votes -
Is this the world's most inconvenient podcast?
2 votes -
Brewing your own rice wine (makgeolli, doburoku, chojiu, etc...)
22 votes -
What are some of your favorite "meeting games?"
Here's a first world problem: I work remote and sometimes I get bored during meetings. Wondering if you guys had any game recommendations for games I can play on a second monitor or something...
Here's a first world problem: I work remote and sometimes I get bored during meetings. Wondering if you guys had any game recommendations for games I can play on a second monitor or something while I kill boredom in my meetings. Mouse only is probably the biggest requirement, and also something more "turn based" so if I need to I can still pay attention to the parts that I need to.
Some of my recommendations:
Slay the Spire (+ Downfall) - I "beat" all of it (A20H for all characters) so I wanted to take a break, but I loved it.
Monster Train - I didn't get into it as much as StS tbh, it's fineeee but not my personal favorite
Super Auto Pets - I'm not really an Autobattler kinda guy but the slow pace and the rotating sets make this game kinda perfect for what I'm looking for!
Brotato - I've been playing mouse only, but can't really stop it in the middle of an intense run tbh.Steam or Android games if possible!
30 votes -
"Carpetless" Super Mario 64 strategy now human capable
28 votes -
Unity fallout continues: Dev group shuts down while developers refuse to come back
41 votes -
Getting frustrated studying for a certification
I signed up for a class from Udemy. Udemy makes tech classes you take at your own pace. The lessons are many short videos with lectures and some practical exercises. I signed up for a class that...
I signed up for a class from Udemy. Udemy makes tech classes you take at your own pace. The lessons are many short videos with lectures and some practical exercises.
I signed up for a class that will prepare me to take a certification class for a skill that will help my resume. Complete worth it.
I am about 2/3 done.
The thing is I've getting frustrated and mentally run down.
The course is voluminous. The going is slow.
I know the thing to do is to forget about finishing, forget about the results, and just focus on enjoying each lesson in the hear and now.
I enjoy taking notes, I am good at it, and I find reviewing notes to be soothing/meditative.
I still get frustrated and demoralized.
Worse, I always thought if I got a lot of time to learn something I would sit down at it 8 hours a day and blow it away. I get wiped out at about 3-4 hours. I'm kicking myself for this which isn't helping.
Any advice, commiseration, or success stories?
21 votes -
Retired astronaut, fighter pilot, and engineer Chris Hadfield reviews aerospace movies and shows
24 votes -
Tildes Video Thread
Find yourself watching tons of great videos on [insert chosen video sharing platform], but also find yourself reluctant to flood the Tildes front page with them? Then this thread is for you. It...
Find yourself watching tons of great videos on [insert chosen video sharing platform], but also find yourself reluctant to flood the Tildes front page with them? Then this thread is for you.
It could be one quirky video that you feel deserves some eyeballs on it, or perhaps you've got a curated list of videos that you'd love to talk us through...
Share some of the best video content you've watched this past week/fortnight with us!
7 votes -
Rewriting a Chumsky Parser By Hand in Rust
8 votes -
The making of the Burger King games
19 votes -
Pee-Wee's Big Adventure | re:View (ft. Macaulay Culkin)
16 votes -
Game development caution
8 votes -
I made a custom Ganondorf action figure
6 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
34 votes -
Epic hasn’t paid Hatoful Boyfriend creator for two years
28 votes -
Ween - The Argus (2003)
9 votes -
A sane, batteries-included starter template for running NixOS on WSL
9 votes -
This is financial advice
53 votes -
What game, in your opinion, has the best graphics?
Completely ignoring gameplay, which game do you think has the most amazing graphics? Which game do you look at and it makes you question how far technology has come? Or maybe which game has such...
Completely ignoring gameplay, which game do you think has the most amazing graphics? Which game do you look at and it makes you question how far technology has come? Or maybe which game has such effective art direction it completely sucks you in?
For me, it's Horizon Forbidden West. I just went back to the DLC after taking a break from it. I forgot just how good it looks! I swear it looks like every grain of sand is modeled, and the character models are insane.
20 votes