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- <h1>I have to wait to tell my mother ...</h1>
- <p>Day 00798: Saturday, 2017 May 13</p>
- </header>
- <img src="/img/CC_BY-SA_4.0/y.st./weblog/2017/05/13.jpg" alt="Mismatched faucet knobs" class="weblog-header-image" width="800" height="480" />
- <section id="general">
- <h2>General news</h2>
- <p>
- What was I thinking lat night?
- Yesterday wasn't Saturday; today is!
- That said, tomorrow is a holiday.
- I don't care about holidays myself, but my mother does, and I don't want to ruin theirs.
- I'll probably try to visit them tomorrow, but I'll keep the name change to myself until later.
- </p>
- <p>
- My bike's tires have been getting flatter, and today, the bike was almost at the point of being unusable.
- The trip to Eugene can't've helped with the situation.
- I need a bike pump.
- My bike is my main mode of transportation.
- I feel awkward begging the neighbour to lend me theirs again, and because theirs has no pressure gauge, I can't tell if I've added enough air.
- I'm sure I didn't add enough, and I suspect I actually let more air <strong>*out*</strong> of one of the tires than I put back into it.
- I can't keep watching for one in second-hand stores, not knowing when I'll find one, so I bought a new one at Fred Meyer after work.
- It's not exactly what I was hoping for; it's got one of those clamp-on valves.
- At least it has an actual pressure gauge on it though.
- It wasn't as expensive as I thought it'd be, either.
- </p>
- <p>
- The PB&J Pup's been removed from Minetest.
- It's a little disappointing, but I'm not too concerned about it; it's served it's most important role already: the ousting of the Nyan Cat.
- With that wart removed, the game has one less reason it might get its developers sued.
- Plus, there's the principle of the matter: the Nyan Cat is nonfree and never should've been introduced into a free game.
- Additionally, it seems tin's been added into the game as a minable mineral; it replaces iron in the recipe for bronze.
- Yay!
- The concept of bronze was taken from the <code>moreores</code> mod, whch uses copper and tin to make bronze.
- However, the person that jacked most of the ores from that mod to put into <code>default</code> decided tin wasn't necessary.
- They figured there were enough ores, and used copper and <strong>*steel*</strong> to make bronze.
- As someone that values iron as the most valuable mineral of the game, I was less than excited to hear that the new bronze, which could only be made into disposable tools, now required iron consumption to make.
- That's been fixed now though, which is fantastic.
- I never thought it would be!
- </p>
- <p>
- Having gotten a fair amount of coursework done for the day, I worked on my <a href="https://forum.minetest.net./viewtopic.php?t=17599"><code>minestats</code></a> mod some more.
- I completely scrapped the original code I had and gone for something simpler, yet more flexible.
- It doesn't do much besides track the amount of each mineral that's been dug.
- However, it's now dynamic in how it track dug minerals.
- In fact, no mineral is hard-coded into the mod!
- It comes at the cost of not being able to track coral-mining any more, but any mod that has its minable minerals defined similarly to those in <code>default</code> will automatically have the minerals mined by players tracked.
- Frustrated, I realised someone could install a tonne of mineral-defining mods, so I've also coded paging support.
- No mater how many ores are added (at least within reason), all can be displayed in the player menu.
- The only real limit would be the fact that Lua lacks an integer data type and doubles lose precision after going so high.
- Keep the number of minerals defined under fifteen digits and it should be fine.
- </p>
- <p>
- My <a href="/a/canary.txt">canary</a> still sings the tune of freedom and transparency.
- </p>
- </section>
- <section id="university">
- <h2>University life</h2>
- <p>
- I wrote up my initial discussion post for the week:
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- When Rome conquered Greece, they enslaved the Greeks.
- Then they made many of the educated Greeks teach the Roman children.
- That seems like such a foolish decision, to me!
- The role of an educator is a powerful one, able to mould the minds of the people, especially the young.
- By having their Greek slaves educate their young, they allowed those slaves to decide the future of the nation.
- Instead of Roman thoughts and ideals being passed down, Greek ones were, which resulted in Romes manners and morals becoming more Greek.
- Rome's religion became mostly the Greek religion with the names changed to Roman ones.
- Some religion concepts were taken from places such as Asia, but for the most part, the Greek deities and stories were adopted.
- The Romans also learned how to write better from the Greeks.
- Before coming in contact with the Greeks, the Romans had written language, but not much by way of creative writing.
- Creative writing wasn't the only art learned from the Greeks, either.
- Visual art, such as sculpture, was also passed down from the Greeks to the Romans.
- The Romans weren't as good as producing original works like the Greeks, but they came to appreciate Greek art, imitating and preserving it.
- Roman philosophers also took Greek ideas intentionally; it wasn't a side effect of using Greek slaves as teachers.
- They studied Greek philosophy and made incorporated its ideas into their own.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- </section>
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- Copyright © 2017 Alex Yst;
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