kentucky444

joined 1 year ago
[–] kentucky444 1 points 11 months ago

For anyone interested in the concept, I strongly suggest reading the book How to Take Smart Notes by Sönke Ahrens.

[–] kentucky444 1 points 11 months ago

Hi, I find points 2, 3 and 6 specially useful from the productivity and self-improvement point of view. Are these further described or explained in some kind of methodology? GTD? Bullet-Journal. If so, could you please post some sources? Thank you in advance.

[–] kentucky444 1 points 1 year ago

I always wondered this, why is it that so many people hate the Epic launcher? is it a technical thing? is it the company? I never had any issues with games, either bough or given away for free. Not sarcasm, I'm genuinely curious.

[–] kentucky444 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Tons.

I apply the Getting Things Done methodology my personal task management. Additionally, I employ the Zettelkasten method, as described by this: https://www.soenkeahrens.de/en/takesmartnotes

In case that you might be familiar with those methodologies, there is a mandatory temporary or previous stage of everything that I process that I do in paper. As such, I use pen and paper for capture and for meeting notes. Afterwards, I process those into the right places using digital tools for later review. I could not fathom capturing these snippets of information using digital tools. Pen and paper is simply faster and more convenient.

I work in IT, specifically managing projects and coordinating teams. They always give me weird looks when I wipe out my notebook and pen and start taking notes. I am unyielding in this matter. Additionally, I always prefer using a whiteboard when discussing something with other people, instead of using some kind of bloated online app. It is faster, and future-proof.

Also,

There is scientific evidence that taking quick notes with pen and paper has cognitive advantages over keyboard typing.

For instance, the Amazon AWS CTO always takes notes in pen and paper. Here he briefly talks about it: https://www.allthingsdistributed.com/2023/06/a-few-words-on-taking-notes.html

I would say that the biggest difference between taking notes in pen or keyboard is that, using pen and paper I'm able to synthesize and draw information in a more free-form and unstructured manner. While taking notes with a keyboard feels more like I'm an stenographer, merely transcribing word by word what is being said.

[–] kentucky444 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

In no particular order.

  • Oxford Optik Paper 90gsm - it does wonders for me because here it is cheap, widely available at any stationery-related shop and comes in a variety of formats (spiral, bound, loose-leaf, planners, etc). The value/price in the Euro zone is unmatched IMHO.

  • Clairefontaine A5 bound notebooks, specifically the My Essential line


designed to answer Leuchtturm bullet journal offers. While a little bit pricey, to me it still beats Leuchtturm1917 in the value/price ratio. They're priced similarly, but the Clairefontaine just offers a better experience with FPs than L1917.

  • I specifically try to use Navigator 80gsm when I print something and then intend on taking notes with my FPs. Cheap, widely available and a really good value/price ratio.
[–] kentucky444 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I made the commitment to play exclusively midrange weapons (effective range 130-260) without melee on my first playthrough.

This boss felt like bullshit. Balseus was a challenge, this was simply a matter completely changing your build/playstyle, or you're gonna hit a wall.

After ~12 tries, I google a build: tank base (which I swore to never touch in my first playthrough) 2 gatling guns and two songbirds.

With that, completely melted the boss on the first try. It was trivial, just hit it with the songbirds and continue building up stagger with the gatling guns. It felt like bullshit.

I know that maybe you're supposed to adapt and slightly change my build, but everything should be viable and fun.

If anyone with a mid-range built (no melee, only bipedal) was able to kill it, would really like to know how.

[–] kentucky444 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

What I feel interesting about this discussion is that people often disregard the early game (lvl <120) and discuss only end-game weapon capabilities. To try to complement on this discussion, I will mostly focus on the early.

Early/mid game (<120 lvl)

  • Just pick any weapon with low stat requirements that you're comfortable with

e.g. I typically pick broadsword, just because I really feel comfortable with its moveset and the requirements are extremely low (Strength 10 and Dexterity 10). But it could be anything, really


claymore, Flamberge, etc.

  • Reduvia - in an ARC build, it costs almost nothing (13 dex is a joke as a requirement for how good this is) just pick it and keep it upgraded, only after you upgrade your Dragon communion seal. It has so much utility that I always have it equipped no matter what. Very little commitment for a huge pay-off.

  • The motivation behind this is leaving enough space to upgrade what should really be your number 1 priority: arcane. Getting to 50 ARC should be your main concern, while also keeping up with FAITH in order to be able to cast the key spells. Also, just get the dragon communion seal.

  • Always carry a Strike-type low-requirement weapon at all times for pure utility. You do not even need to upgrade this weapon a lot. This is key for certain enemies, specially skeletons, gargoyles, miners, and crystalians. As I said, this is not my main weapon, but when I enter catacombs or mines, I switch to it and the overall experience is so much better. My favourite picks are the Morningstar or the regular mace


the one sold by the crone twins in the Roundtable. I upgrade it a bit just to keep up, say 70% of what I would upgrade my main weapon. Actually, this could be merged with Point 1. Hence, this strike-type low-requirement weapon being your main weapon. Strike-type damage is really good early game. It is not fantastic against anything


except crystalians


but it is not weak against anything either. Thus, just pick the regular mace or morning star and keep it fully upgraded with it until lvl ~120.

  • Do not sleep on the Cleanrot Knight's Sword

this could perfectly also become your main weapon until later in the game (lvl > 100). It has a really nice moveset, and R2 attacks damage enemies with a shield up. It is the longest weapon in its category. The best part is that it has the same requirement Dexterity 13 as the Reduvia, so, using this weapon is free. The only downside is that you cannot get it until Caelid. But, honestly, it is not that big of a deal.

The main key for everything that I mentioned above is that, your main melee weapon is not really your main weapon. In an ARC/FAI build, your true main weapon is the Dragon Communion Seal. So what people typically refer to as main weapon


as in, always equipped in your right hand


should be auxiliary or your second priority when building your character. What really makes this build fun and OP to use are the spells that you unlock with these stats.

Mid/late game lvl > 120

By this time you should have ARC maxed out at 50 and Faith at ~25 to cast a wide array of spells.

The next step is a matter of choosing your favorite weapon. As soon as you've decided, just level up the stats required to wield it. Just go watch youtube videos with the top 10 ARC/FAI weapons. The usual suspects are Morgott's Cursed Sword, Mohgwyn's Sacred Spear, Rivers of Blood, Blasphemous Blade, etc.

At the time of writing this, I'm exactly at this turning point and I've decided to go with Str just to get enough to equip Mohgwyn's Sacred Spear. Just for fun.

Final Comments

  • You can get pretty early in the game Ash of War: Bloody Slash, that scales with arc and increases bleed proc. This should be 90% your pick for ash of war. It is actually pretty powerful, the HP price that you pay per use is very low considering the massive damage that it dashes out.

  • A little bit after that


I would say around lvl ~80


you get the black whetstone, and access to some occult ashes of war to finally complement your weapon configuration.

  • Do not sleep on the Catch Flame spell. It is actually super convenient and you get it pretty early. Just use it and judge by yourself.

Do not neglect VIGOR, ENDURANCE and MIND, even if you mainly focus on ARC, you should also level these up.

[–] kentucky444 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The post title says under $100. Raspberry Pis run for ~$250 nowadays.

[–] kentucky444 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I own a Lamy 2000 brand new and I'm started to get worried about the capping mechanism.

Does the Lamy 2000 cap click securely after many years of use? or it becomes loose?

[–] kentucky444 1 points 1 year ago

Pilot Iroshizuku Syo-Ro - it is basically a teal. I received it as a gift sample when buying from a reputable seller (arlepo) and it looks and behaves totally average for me. i've never owned any Pilot Iroshizuku or other premium series like Pelikan Edelstein and was super hyped about it. But eventually my expectations were not met. Honestly.

... I mean, it looks good. But not 21€ good.

[–] kentucky444 1 points 1 year ago

Could you post back when you actually have to clean/flush it? I'm particularly interested in how hard or how much time it takes to clean a piston filler.

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