The NITECORE UM10 is an "in/out" charger too - it handles various sized LiIon batteries one-at-a-time. A switch on the end determines if it is charging or discharging. Their site says it's discontinued, but I thought I recently saw them at a shop in Seattle. Time to pick up a spare.
Maybe I missed it, is there no love for the piping to an external command?
I set a mark, move to somewhere else, then save the area between where I am and the mark: ma(assign mark "a" to position), jjj(move three lines away), |a(pipe from current-position to the "a" mark then a ! prompt appears so enter...) cat >somefile (which dumps the selected text, cur-pos to mark "a", into somefile).
That was great for saving snippets of news or emails.
Also, the -j setting. Sets the line position for searches so context is available, eg using -j8 means the search is 8 lines from the top of the screen.
I use the piping feature of less to add some interactivity to git-log.
When a commit is "selected" (at the top line of the screen), usually after a series of n/N, I can press a shortcut that invokes an action on this commit.
Currently, I use it for two things:
1. Running git-show on a commit I'm interested in. The cool thing is that once I quit the git-show's less, I'm back to where I was in git-log's less. They stack.
2. fixup-ing a commit, after verifying with the command from 1. that it really is the one I want. I've had enough problems with git-absorb and git-fixup that I prefer to do it myself.
I detect when a particular command is running[1] and set up keyboard shortcuts that send key sequences to less and ultimately lead to the top line of the screen being piped to a short script of mine that extracts the commit hash and does something with it.
[1]: via a debug trap in bash, which sets the terminal title, which, in turn, is detected by keyd-application-mapper; other setups are possible, I used to use tmux for that.
I've been led to believe those video thumbprints exist, but I know the hash of the perceived audio is often all that is needed for a match of what is currently being presented (movie, commercial advert, music-as-music-not-background, ...).
This is why a lot of series uploaded to YouTube will be sped up, slowed down, or have their audio’s pitch changed; if the uploader doesn’t do this, it gets recognized by YouTube as infringing content.
Cash-only here. I have not (generally) accepted pennies since the mid 1980's.
Many of the local places (Seattle - Belltown & the Market) are cool with rounding transactions to the nearest dollar, so that helps. It might also be part of being an active participant in the local society.
I've read, from a few separate sources that were not research papers, something similar that claimed the development was a result of existing in semi-aquatic environments such as home on land but swimming for food/safety. I neither agree or disagree (not my field, I don't possess appropriate background/information), but I do think of it when evolution of vocal cords is mentioned.
I don't recall the sources ATM, possibly something out of CoEvolution Quarterly or Bucky Fuller. Again, not research papers.
Semi-aquatic environments make sense if you look at our brains dependency on DHA (seafood is a rich source) and the hypothesis that our fingers get wrinkly in water after a while to improve grip.
Aren't we a lot more evolved for hunting animals on foot? The whole thing with us losing our fur and sweating with the whole body, adaptations to running and throwing stuff, all of this makes us better hunters, but not necessarilly fushermen.
The two go together. Living with water requires control of breathing. Hunting animals on land requires strong endurance and probably also an ability to carry water.
Nicely put (oof!). I believe it also enforced a minimal color depth, which none of our machines could directly support on their own hardware, forcing the use of remote X11 displays.
https://charger.nitecore.com/product/um10
reply