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Madness build swag

2024.05.17 03:48 bdizzle314 Madness build swag

Yellow all! I am going frenzied flame ending this time and im role-playing the story as I started out a holy flaming warrior that dukes it out with a big sword then I went curved bonk then I have been using blasphemous blade for all the obvious reason and also it heavily fits the vibe but the idea is that he got slowly overtime corrupted and was slowly dragged towards the three fingers called to them by the enchanting nomads song without ever realizing it I want to use madness spells mostly not even casting anything except buffs really. BB is fun and even hits hard with a faith build on melee but its kinda eh tho im at the point where fire dmg is king for what options I do have as all the end game bosses are mostly weak to fire like malenia and radagon I wanna try something different like maliketh but I'm gonna settle on bb or maliketh blade for now but whats some good medium roll much poise as possible swag. Mega bonus points if it includes the guardians mask because for some reason the tree guardian mask is so damn nice and probably the best lightweight armor head I think.
Sorry for the crackhead style block of text I'll fix in a minute I just wanted the question out there.
Tldr: I need some quality swag/ fashion to go with blasphemous blade/ malikeths blade following the corrupted warrior of flaming faith build (started flame infusion sword and bonk and going frenzy flame ending so I want madness themed fashion while still carrying a "holy" vibe)
submitted by bdizzle314 to Eldenring [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 04:37 JohannGoethe It behooves the state of my space-time existence šŸš§ NOT to engage in dialogue with those who drop either the S-bomb šŸ’£, the C-bomb šŸ’£, or other DL red flag šŸš© terms

Abstract
Memory note, on rules of dialogue engagement, about not wasting limited space-time existence with mentally backwards-walkingšŸš¶ā€ā™€ļøāž”ļøšŸ§  puerile hecklers from the audience.
Sheikh Mahmoud
Mental note
The following (12 May A69) is a mental šŸ’­ wake-up note šŸ“ to self:
ā€œIf someone from the linguistics community, i.e. those lost in PIEland šŸ„§šŸļø beliefs or ShemLand pandering, e.g. as post-amassing monthly now in linguisticshumor (100K+ members), or Egyptology community, being confused by learned incorrect CartoPhonetics foundations, or whatever 20+ EAN-impacted communities, using the Sheikh Mahmoud technique, calls you ā€schizo-typicā€ šŸ’Š, e.g. here, here (N[7]R, 2-4 May A69), this 18+ user (aka puerile) even deleting their entire reddit account, a few days later (a commonly seen anti-EAN phenomenon), after given a 7-day ban for fouling on red flag šŸš© DebateLinguistics (DL) discussion rules, a ā€œschizoā€ babbler, e.g. here (V[8]V, 11 May A69), or ā€œschizo-phrenicā€ here (J[13]R, 31 Mar A69) AND posts, repeatedly, that I am ā€œcrazyā€ šŸ¤Ŗ here, here (J[13]R, 24 Apr A69), etc., these being the two main anti-EAN derogation mud šŸ’© slinging terms employed, in growing weekly or monthly derogations; all because I have begun (11 Feb A67/2022), since the Pandemic, to work on EAN theory (Swift, A17), evidenced by the LeidenI350 stanzas, which proves that all ABGD-based languages ā€” the English, Latin, Greek, Sanskrit based languages most importantly, as explaining this combined group solves the famous Jones common ā€œsource languageā€ problem:
Jones on the common source hypothesis:
ā€œSanskrit (ą¤øą¤‚ą¤øą„ą¤•ą„ƒą¤¤), Greek (ĪˆĪ»Ī»Ī·Ī½Īµ), Latin, Gothic, Celtic, and possibly old Persian, must have sprung from some šŸ—£ļø common source?ā€
ā€” William Jones (169A/1786), Asiatick Society of Bengal, Third Anniversary Discourse, Presidential address, Feb 2
The šŸ†• common source being Abydos, Egypt (5700A/-3745), e.g. here, here, etc., the center of the new EgyptoIndoEuropean (EIE language family).
ā€” words, Etymo, phonetics, and AlphabetOrigin, and alphabet ā€œorderā€, derive directly from the 28 symbol LunarScript; which formed in the 500-year Sesostris (Ī£Ī•Ī£ĪŸĪ£Ī¤Ī”Ī™Ī£) [1285] empire, e.g. here, here, etc., world language domination window, between 3300A and 2800A, wherein the Egyptians impressed their language system on people, similar to how the Romans, during the Roman empire era, impressed Latin on people; which, in short, was imprinted, similar to a language coding computer program, onto the minds šŸ§  of people, in the form of the 28 number-letter Osiris-themed ā€Egyptian alphabetā€, the first 14-letters: A to N, arranged in so-called: hoe š“ƒ, š“Œ¹, š“ [A], sow š“…, š“‚ŗ š“„ (š¤„, E), reap šŸŒ±š“Œ³ [M], and 150-day flood šŸ’¦ [N], yearly agricultural cycle, aka ā€farming orderā€ (Horner, A67); wherein a four layered social structure was encoded: farming, priests, warriors, government, gods, defined by laws, was encoded; spoken about, in geometric and cosmology terms, by Plato, Plutarch, Young, Swift, Gadalla, and Rehab; all derived from so-called ā€œreducedā€ Egyptian GodGeometry and EgyptoLinguistics; a new number-coded language, formulated by Egyptian mathematicians, engineers, e.g. here, and cosmologists:
Psychoyos on engineered language invention hypothesis:
ā€œIt is strange how everybody wonders šŸ’­ if it was possibleā“for humble workers, Semite prisoners of war in fact [Gardiner, 39A], to have invented šŸ’”alphabetic šŸ”  writing āœļø? But no one should discuss the possibility of the invention alphabetic writing to have been the work of āš™ļø engineers, even though the myths seem to point in this direction? Maybe alpha, beta, gamma, delta ... represent 1, 2, 3, 4 ... in some šŸ—£ļø language?ā€
ā€” Dimitris Psychoyos (A50/2005), ā€œThe Forgotten Art of Isopsephyā€œ (pg. #)
[continued]
originally described by the seven main Egyptian numerals, dating to the 5300A TombUJ number tags šŸ·ļø, which attest letter-number H (8), as š“ [Z15G], i.e. two palms š“‚Ŗ, and letter-number R (100), as the solar šŸŒž ram head š“¢ [Z1], and the 5700A Naqada I period black-rimed vase, which attest the proto letter-number I (10), as type: āˆ©, the Horus š“…ƒ solar šŸŒž falcon in the Hathor š“„ Milky Way šŸŒŒ cow šŸ® yoke home š“‰”, aka letter omega Ī© [800] presently; a 6K+ year old Egyptian cosmology star šŸŒŸ story, recorded by 1,050+ HieroTypes; the oldest of which being letter-number H [8] or š“ [Z15G], in the attested form: š“½ (š“‚Ŗ) / š“½ (š“‚Ŗ), found extant on the 20,000A Ishango math šŸ§® bone šŸ¦“, Congo, Africa; all of which predicates a steep 4-year or more learning curve, in order to understand what is going on:
New EAN member who has previously enjoyed read Fideler (A38):
ā€œThereā€™s a steep barrier to entry on this material in terms of time commitment and information processing ability.ā€
ā€” O[19]0 (A69), ā€œcommentā€, Hebrew Numerals, May 9
[continued]
Subsequently, as I only have so many days of space-time existence left on this planet šŸŒ, the 3rd rock šŸŖØ from the sun šŸŒž, who the Egyptians referred to by the hiero-name: š“€­ š“ƒ€ š“…¬ [A40-D58-G38] (here), to use to finish the scheduled 6-volume EAN book šŸ“š set, so I can get back to the HumanChemThermo (HCT) derivation and final scheduled target šŸŽÆ HCT publication; it thus behooves me šŸš§ not to engage in dialogue with those who drop either the S-bomb šŸ’£, the C-bomb šŸ’£, or other DL red flag šŸš© terms, as these types of people already have their mind ā€œmade upā€, being pre-disposed to backwards non-open-mined thinking šŸ¤”, their brain šŸ§  anchored āš“ļø in accepted ā€œstandardā€ status quo, but logically incongruent, ideology and dogma; and no amount of arguing or discussion will convince them otherwise, as has been evidenced in the 1.5-year open windowšŸŖŸof free-going discussion, in the early period of Reddit EAN; or to reply to people whose refutation is ā€œLOL, you are not a scientist, and do not know peer review!ā€, a comment made while I was making this mental note.
It is better, as Planck said, to let the old generation die off, so that the new generation will allowed sunlight so to grow to the new view.ā€
ā€” Libb Thims (A69), ā€œmental noteā€, wake-up state, 9:35 PM CST, May 12
Mental note Follow-up #1
The following is the ā€œreducedā€œ version of the former:
ā€œDo not šŸš§ engage [DNE] with puerile minds.ā€
ā€” Libb Thims (A69), ā€mental noteā€, wake up state (sleep: 11-hours); thoughts on previous day wake up mental note, combined with V[4]S, in this post, who dropped the S-bomb šŸ’£, to which I replied with pro-tip rule, at the Russian (language) sub, about the following letter L type switch from: Ī› ā†’ Š›, between my name in print as: Ī›ŠøŠ±Š± Š¢ŠøŠ¼Ń, below my photo, versus this the Google translate name Š›ŠøŠ±Š± Š¢ŠøŠ¼Ń (Libb Thims) or say Š›ŠµŠ¾Š½Š°Ń€Š“ Š­Š¹Š»ŠµŃ€ (Leonard Euler) also shown in the article, below his photo, spelled as Ī›ŠµŠ¾Š½Š°Ń€Š“ Š­Š¹Ī›ŠµŃ€ in this A52 (2007) Russian article. It still boggles my mind how someone throw the S-bomb at someone for asking the simple question: ā€œhow: Ī› ā†’ Š›?ā€, 3:30PM CST May 13
Mental note Follow-up #2
ā€You are wasting my space-time.ā€
ā€” Libb Thims (A69), truncated summary of previous, 2:23AM May 14
Pro tip!
A good rule of thumb to shut-down the conversation with the do-not-engage-with (DNEW) types of users, is just to paste the following, which links to this mental note page:
Reply.
In other words, it should not be that difficult to have a coherent ABC conversation about the origin of ABC, or the new theory of the Egyptian origin of language šŸ—£ļø , without recourse to a trip down the sewer šŸ•³ļø drain, the city trash šŸš® dump, or to the happy default land of ad-hominem-ville?
submitted by JohannGoethe to LibbThims [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 09:53 mr_boizoff MoonDrop Golden Ages 1979 TWS Earphones Review

MoonDrop Golden Ages 1979 TWS Earphones Review
Another chance. I decided to give MoonDropā€™s TWS earphones another chance, and it was a tough decision because MoonDrop Alice were shamefully poor in terms of connection stability and proprietary software.
When it comes to MoonDrop Golden Ages 1979, which Iā€™m gonna talk about today, my attention was drawn to their design, low cost, and a planar driver. And I also had a glimmer of hope that at least MoonDrop managed to bring the software to the users-donā€™t-get-sick-and-tired state, after all.
https://preview.redd.it/zz8tointzjzc1.jpg?width=1800&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=7c0936f26d1c692c8feed95cbbc3022af992e155
I got Golden Ages (hereinafter ā€” GA) for $80 a month ago, and now they already go for $75.
This review in my blog: https://boizoff.com/language/en/moondrop-golden-ages-1979-tws-earphones-review/

Whatā€™s included

The earphones come in a brightly decorated large box.
https://preview.redd.it/h7mb3muuzjzc1.jpg?width=1800&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=1ff467edf04065676a514b5967a59e377dfcebf7
What do you get:
  1. The earphones;
  2. A charging case;
  3. A protective cover for the charging case;
  4. A USB-A to USB Type-C cable;
  5. 4 pairs of eartips of the same type in different sizes.
There are some papers underneath, including a quality assurance service report.

Design, assembly, technology

TWS earphones start with a charging case, which is quite large and stylish when it comes to GA.
The design and color choice is no accident: in 1979, the first Sony Walkman TPS-L2 cassette player was released, which looked like this:
Source: theverge.com
Therefore, there is an image of sort of a TPS-L2 window and a specific left-pointing arrow at the front of the case (the film was rewound from the right reel to the left one if you are not in the know) and an orange pairing button at the back of it.
https://preview.redd.it/9a331jo10kzc1.jpg?width=1800&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=461bf149090451cbd811bc00f4041f6f666254a3
There is a single green indicator diode at the front, too. The USB Type-C charging port has been moved to the bottom face.
The case interior is painted orange. The earphones fit in tightly, hold on to the case with magnets, and are not loose.
https://preview.redd.it/vi7izb930kzc1.jpg?width=1800&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=f3f94ad3cfaf57cbc8bc5860f3521bce02833b82
You can pull (with noticeable effort) a transparent protective cover on the case, equipped with an eye for attaching a lanyard.
https://preview.redd.it/nq7nnhi40kzc1.jpg?width=1800&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=c8de849960b8592d328fb8b4070ff6e2a7c4dfde
The case is well-made; it feels pleasantly smooth, opens and closes without creaking, with a mid-elite click.
Letā€™s move on to the earphones and start with their technological features. The GA use a 13 mm planar driver. The manufacturer focuses on the dual suspension system implemented in this driver, as well as 4 times higher efficiency as compared to dynamic drivers of the same size.
The earphones are made of gray plastic, with some themed pictures coated on the ā€˜sticksā€™ on the outside. And whatā€™s the main, they have L and R on them. There are microphones at the ends of the stems that capture the userā€™s speech, one for each earphone.
https://preview.redd.it/mk8x47e60kzc1.jpg?width=1800&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=dffee9100bb5d172cc6d5e22a5cf5cb67a811fd3
The compensation hole is neatly covered with a mesh and oriented upwards.
https://preview.redd.it/iidh9fm70kzc1.jpg?width=1800&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=11f0bf033b665fea23657c5bbfa4109844b6ae4e
The oval-shaped sound duct is extremely short, covered with a mesh, too. There are additional holes on the inside; I suspect these are additional microphones for ANC.
https://preview.redd.it/05z973t80kzc1.jpg?width=1800&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=27d9850f4a979245b6f5e18f69149633e41b0d88
There are charge contacts at the ends of the ā€˜sticksā€™.
https://preview.redd.it/addkd73a0kzc1.jpg?width=1800&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=686aba1b9ecd549d3f49be122817d3563c758768
The earphones are made quite neatly, but they feel cheap: the pictures are of poor quality, and joints and burrs are visible on the plastic. The enclosures are painted, which immediately raises the question of their durability. But, as always, it is necessary to keep in mind the product price. In terms of visibility and recognition, everything is just fine: once you see them in someoneā€™s ears, you will never mistake them for other TWS.

Hardware and software

Before describing the functionality of the native Android application itself, I should tell about some ins and outs, that is to say, how you can update the application and firmware so that you can see everything that is shown below.
The algorithm is as follows:
  1. Follow the link https://www.pgyer.com/SrNXCMā€”there is the application MoonDrop Link 2.0, version 1.0.50c-240429. (On the manufacturerā€™s website, there is version 1.0.0-bla-bla-bla.)
  2. We need to install it, launch it, go to the GA settings on the OTA tab, and select firmware version 1.1.0.
  3. Time for an update. Itā€™s working like a charm.
So, the application starts from the device selection screen. Letā€™s choose GA.
https://preview.redd.it/ra5xjm6c0kzc1.jpg?width=505&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=56a9c5cc6a3c21375c7acd799586ae72f42caef8
On the first EQ tab, you can select one out of 5 preset equalizers.
https://preview.redd.it/z6fno9if0kzc1.jpg?width=505&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=ef25107dd9ae5dfdd004f15c1bf362958a6ba2d4
On the ANC tab, you can control the following values:
  • Noise reduction modeā€”acoustic transparency, all off, or active noise reduction is on.
  • Enable or exclude any of these three modes from the settings rotation.
  • Set the mode switching sequence.
https://preview.redd.it/o7lgd75i0kzc1.jpg?width=505&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=1d0eeea5ce1943605d92842b275d6f1482ebb3f8
The Setting tab provides access to selecting the hardware gain mode, as well as enabling support for LDAC and LC3 codecs.
https://preview.redd.it/go16k7rj0kzc1.jpg?width=505&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=e8493be33ca358ad41f949fe3c4c5a06ee5a415f
On the OTA tab, you can select one of the firmware options available online or choose a file from the local storage.
https://preview.redd.it/0tm6eurm0kzc1.jpg?width=505&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=958d5b89aac97991fb7a3824efa5bbb5687d20d6
The last Touch tab hosts control gesture settings.
https://preview.redd.it/9j32pwoo0kzc1.jpg?width=505&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=5bb51cec5afdf106043ec033627904ee54cf6f06

Ergonomics, usage experience

Hardware

Good points:
  1. The earphones are stably connected to the source (when using LDAC, I tested them with Samsung S23 Ultra and Hiby R6III) and do not lose connection, and this is already half the battle.
  2. The earphones are easy to pull out of the case, theyā€™re made for comfort of your fingers.
  3. Gestures are recognized and processed without any problems.
  4. Active noise reduction works, and it works quite well, at around the level of Soundcore Libery 3 Pro.
Ins and outs:
  1. The earphones ā€˜sitā€™ very tightly in the case, which heavily limits options for alternative eartips: 2-flange SpinFit, large Tangzu Tang Sancai, standard ā€˜foamsā€™ and many more eartips just do not let you close the case. Iā€™ll tell about the eartips in detail below.
  2. The microphones are disgusting, much worse than anything in the same ballpark.
  3. IPX rating is not stated. However, I had functional training wearing them, sweated a lot, and the earphones survived. But Iā€™ve only tried it once.
Lastly, there is my personal problem, which is my beard. When the acoustic transparency was on, it turned out to be impossible for me to use GA because the ā€˜sticksā€™ of the earphones touched my beard hair all the time and rustled nastily.
As for the fit and enclosure geometry, I tend to regard them as normal (as to my own ears). It is impossible to forget that GA are in your ears, that is, to stop feeling them, as it works with Sony Linkbuds S. It is even difficult to wear them for 4-5 hours as the enclosures begin putting unpleasant pressure on your auricles. However, as for 3-4 hours of listening, they suit me personally quite well.
It would be wrong to make any generalizations out of this very personal case.
To sum up: the earphones have no problems with connection, and there is no reason to hope for the appearance of any good microphones in TWS (at the current stage of technological development) for any money in the world.

Software

The application has started working much better ā€“ it is more or less stable, it is logically organized, and it just works, after all. Iā€™d like to specially mention very funny notification sounds voiced in a kawaii girlish manner, which was done by Mitsuki Yuki, the MoonDrop mascot (see the photo of the kit, the picture on the box). Compared to the nightmare that was in the days of MoonDrop Alice, the current version of Link 2.0 is the apex of grace and convenience.
However, this is only if you compare Link 2.0 versions with each other.
And if we take into account any competitors, then some limited capabilities come to light:
  • no N-band equalizer, let alone a parametric one. There are predetermined presets only;
  • no notification volume setting;
  • no wizard to make your own equalizer;
  • no implemented function to automatically enable acoustic transparency;
  • no connection to two devices;
  • no sleep timer setting in idle mode;
  • no way to control the volume using gestures;
  • no way to switch equalizer presets using gestures.
Besides, in order to upgrade to firmware 1.1.0, you need to google really badly and make it through to the method that I described above. There is also lousy English, but that already seems to be hopeless.
On the other hand, GA and those TWS that can do all of the above are apples and oranges in terms of their pricing.

Quick specifications overview

  • Design: closed-back ā€˜earbudsā€™.
  • Drivers: 1 planar driver.
  • Weight of a single earpiece: 5 grams.
  • Weight of the case with the earphones inside: 46 grams.
  • Bluetooth version: 5.3.
  • Dust and moisture protection: none.
  • Audio transmission protocols: SBC, AAC, LDAC, LC3.
  • Earphone battery life: approx. 5 hours when using LDAC and medium gain level.
  • Earphone charging time: approx. 1 hour.
  • Case charging time: approx. 1.5 hours.

Subjective sound impression

Since the earphones have 5 equalizer presets, we need to talk about them point-by-point. Surprisingly, 4 out of 5 presets are not bad. They are frankly listenable and are a little more ā€˜like or dislikeā€™ and a little less ā€˜failed tuning or OK tuningā€™. Only the Secret preset sounds as if someone fell asleep on the keyboard when tuning: this is a totally, mysteriously distorted sound.
So, I stayed with the Basshead preset for the outside and the Reference one for home. By ear, these two presets differ only in the amount of subbass, which you would want more in a noisy urban environment, especially as GA has certain problems with sound insulation.
GA soundā€¦ great. They sound just phenomenally good and ā€˜rightā€™ for TWS earphones in general and even more so for such inexpensive TWS earphones.
In terms of subbass and bass tuning, MoonDrop bucked the trend and did not ā€˜pile upā€™ 120 Hz on them so that they would beat and shake on your head, leaving all frequencies to the left behind. In GA, the subbass dominates the bass. They are well separated and do not ā€˜overlapā€™ each other. I can assume that the frequency response in this part is linear, but rotated clockwise. The choice of eartips is very important: if you do not hear subbass or it is subtle and not deep, try different eartips (see the next section).
The lower middle and middle sections are just great, I donā€™t know how else to describe them. They are full-fledged, smooth, informative, and everything is just fine with them.
The upper middle section reveals a little fly in the ointment: GA sound a bit unnaturally in this frequency range, a little shriller than necessary. And thatā€™s because the volume at 4 kHz should be lower than one at 2.7 kHz. GA have them equal, or even 4 kHz may outvoice 2.7. This gives rise to sharpness, sort of ā€˜detailā€™, but also artificiality of the sound. I need to underline: this is about a fine nuance and not about a fatal tuning error.
And further up, to the right of the frequency response graph, everything is fine up to nearly 11-12 kHz, where the listener will find the nastiest surprise in GA tuning ā€“ a gargantuan mountain. The ā€˜mountainā€™ can be heard, and rustling and ā€˜cracklingā€™ appear on some tracks that actively use this range. Some people do like it, but I donā€™t. The disaster is not immense, it is still a category of ā€˜I donā€™t give a shit pretty muchā€™/ā€™you can get used to itā€™, as you like. And itā€™s still infinitely better than, say, Fiio FW5, true story.
The feeling of the virtual sound stage is realistic, but it is more deep rather than wide. There is no incredible sound source positioning.
Thus, I am inclined to rate the GA tuning as outstanding, despite that annoying Qomolangma at 11 kHz. I donā€™t remember any manufacturer setting up TWS earphones so well, so deliberately.

Eartip choice

Eartips for GA are a pain in the ass because of two facts:
  1. the GA sound depends on the eartips A LOT and, at the same time,
  2. the choice of eartips for GA is strictly limited to ā€˜shortā€™ models because the charging case will not close otherwise.
And I would like to change the eartips because the ones provided do not ensure really good sound insulation, which is why there is not enough subbass, and ANC works not really effectively.
The good news is that usual ā€™roundā€™ eartips can be pulled on oval sound ducts of the earphones quite well.
My list of what you can put on GA, with the earphones fitting in the case:
  1. JBL Project Rock;
  2. Whizzer ET100AB;
  3. Tangzu Tang Sancai ā€“ Wide bore;
  4. SpinFit OMNI;
  5. Zhulinniao Zhu Rythme;
  6. Sony EP-NI1000 (eartips WF-1000xm4).
All kinds of SpinFit CP100, CP240, ā€˜foamsā€™ by KZ and many other models will go with the earphones, but not with the case, so to speak.
How does the GA sound change in dependence to the eartips? Radically:
https://preview.redd.it/rt468wyy0kzc1.jpg?width=1600&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=285417bd9ebb4921aae0e3c500de26637d9befca
The fit depth also has an additive effect, although with such an earphone form factor it can be varied within very small limits:
https://preview.redd.it/ukjrnor01kzc1.jpg?width=1600&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=b639fcc1c393fb5ea290b24808d68b61eed26704
Personally, I chose Tangzu Tang Sancai ā€“ Wide bore. They turned out to be the most comfortable for me and the closest to the eartips provided in terms of sounding. But they insulate much better.

Measurements

The headphones were used with the Hiby R6III player (LDAC). A measuring rig conforms to the IEC60318-4 standard. The smoothing is indicated on the graphs. Iā€™ve described the limitations of the rig and the headphones measurements in general in this article.
This is the basic frequency response graph for GA with ANC turned on, medium gain, and the Reference preset:
https://preview.redd.it/fl1111o31kzc1.jpg?width=1600&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=fb976ea7a64fc9abdf8cbe7ca774470c2115bb68
And itā€™s an absolutely brilliant setup because:
  1. the subbass is between the Harman curve and the neutral curve;
  2. the middle corresponds to the Harman curve;
  3. the upper frequency range falls below the neutral curve;
  4. it all starts looking ill at 12 kHz.
The upshot is tuning, which sound is more fun compared to completely neutral one, but itā€™s still not as V-shaped as Harman. It is very smooth, with 5-6 kHz correctly ā€˜suppressedā€™, but with 4 kHz raised, which negatively affects the sound.
And there are immediate answers to basic questions: is sound delivery different with ANC on an off? No.
https://preview.redd.it/x0lj3cy51kzc1.jpg?width=1600&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=f0c8d1d2e7c59d2380297311bcad9db8294db52e
Reddit does not allow to insert more pictures, so please conitue reading here.
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2024.05.07 21:04 superdstar56 Setup Mobula7 & Radiomaster Pocket - First Time + BT2.0 and Bluejay upgrades

I got my Mobula7 1s about a week ago, and I've spent every waking hour trying to get it to work. I finally got it up and flying and I flew about 40 packs, broke 2 motors off the frame and broke the antenna. I have more screws and a replacement antenna in the mail. It is even more fun than I was expecting.
If I was more weak of heart, I would have given up on the setup process. I am in IT and my job requires a lot of research, trial and error, and tech research. I was following YouTube videos, but so many settings and things have changed on new updates, I wanted to give my exact setup directions so someone like me can find this and see what I did to get mine to work. Looking back I probably spent...15-18 hours trying to get it all right. I set up and re-set up a lot of things.
**Starting out in FPV Takes a LOT of knowledge and setup of equipment. Follow along and watch ALL of the videos, sometimes multiple times. I found myself finding an answer by re-watching and going over the steps multiple times and catching something I'd missed. This is a time commitment, setting up your quad and your radio is going to take A COUPLE OF HOURS AT LEAST! So get comfortable.
Here's what I started with:
Happymodel Mobula7 1s - Analog 0802 20k X12 ELRS
Radiomaster Pocket (I wish now I had started with a Boxer, but I will probably save for a Boxer Max. For $65, the Pocket has been great, and now I'll have two when I get the one I want, sweet)
EV800D Goggles - For $100, these are useable to start out
BetaFPV BT2.0 Pigtails - get that juice
Soldering Iron (I got a 60w all in one kit and I wish I got the TS100
8x Tattu 1s BT2.0 450mah HV batteries - charge to 4.35v
ViFly Whoopstor 3 - highly recommend, charges 6 batteries quickly
64gb SD card for goggles
Skyzone USB OTA Receiver - does every new fpv pilot buy one of these so other people can watch?
2x Meteor75 Pro Frames (everyone and their dog recommends the M75P frame as the most durable, I got extra to build a slightly "larger" build for outdoor - You can use 45mm props with the Meteor75 Pro
Gemfan blades - mine have chipped already, but these don't really break
**After flying for 2 days, I'm ordering 100 M1.4x3 screws ($7) because the motor screws break off from the frame when flying/crashing. They give you extra but I've used them up and I'm on the last ones. I'm also ordering these 75mm u.fl antennas because I've broken the ceramic tip off of the antenna and if I go behind a wall I lose signal. No big deal, a few bucks. UPDATE - after flying about 20 packs, the antenna is better than nothing but not as good as the flimsy original one, but i did bend it a lot. I have a truerc singularity in the mail.
Lets start with the radio:
Radiomaster Pocket - (I'm sure this same thing works with Radiomaster brand radios, I followed along with people on the boxer and zorro - also if you don't have a radio I have to vote against the zorro for the small batteries)
Follow Captain Drone explain and setup switches (STOP at 8:30, where he starts binding. Betaflight update lets you bind from your computer. Start watching again when your drone is connected and the firmware is updated. Later he will walk you through setting up the "arm" switch and flight modes.
Download the ExpressLRS Configurator from Github
**I struggled to bind my Mobula for a long time until I realized that the video and the walkthrough on Github both failed to mention the "packet rate" setting in the radio menu when you press the ELRS lua script. The default is D500, and MOBULA WILL ONLY BIND on the 500hz setting. Anything with a letter in front and you will wonder what is wrong.
Update your Radiomaster internal ELRS lua script to have your binding phrase. Follow these exact instructions, but set the correct packet rate!
Plug in your quad and connect to betaflight (explained in Mobula section)
Go to the Receivers tab, set SPI reciever mode, with CRSF, and the binding phrase you put in the lua script. Save and reboot
Either press "bind" or go to the CLI and type "bind_rx"
Run ELRS lua script and press Bind. There should be a C in the top right corner. Your radio is bound.
Mobula7 1s - Setup and bind to Betaflight
Soldering BT2.0 connector - (gives you more power and more amps, highly recommend) This was my first attempt with a soldering iron. I watched Bardwells 30 minute tutorial and it helped tremendously. I started at 300C and it was too cold, I got the positive off but not the negative. The thru holes are difficult and so small. You have to hold the ground for quite a while for it to come out. I was holding the board and it got very hot, to the point I thought I messed it up. I tried again later with a hotter iron and doing quick 1-2 second bursts and it went much smoother. Take your time, line everything up. I successfully did it, but I should have practiced first.
Download Betaflight configurator (the web version didn't work for me on my Windows machine)
Plug in your quad and let Betaflight (BF) find it.
**SAVE YOUR CONFIG - go to the "presets" tab and Save Backup to someplace you will remember. After you flash the firmware, you have to reload the backup
Go to firmware flasher - Auto detect or the Mobula7 is CRAZYBEEF4SX1280. It should match the target in the top left.
Load Firmware (Online) and then Flash Firmware. You might have to save and reboot or unplug and plug back in.
**This is a huge part where I got stuck (I don't remember if it was before or after firmware). The radio and quad weren't binding. Finally, on the BF Welcome tab there are links to drivers. Download the ImpulseRC Driver Fixer. It is a tool which automatically fixes the incorrectly assigned driver for STM32 BOOTLOADER (FC in firmware update mode)
Move your quad around and make sure the model on the screen matches with what you're doing, and that the arrow points to the front of the quad.
Go to the Receiver tab and make sure your radio is bound with your quad. Move the sticks and make sure they correlate with throttle, yaw etc.
Betaflight Setup - go back to the Radiomaster section to the Captain Drone video. Start after he binds at 8:30. (You will use "bind_rx" in cli tab) It walks you through setting up arm switch and flight modes, etc.
Presets - this is especially useful because you can use someone else's information to get you started. I used the UAVTech Whoop preset, I believe it sets the master multiplier at 1.6x, and it works for me.
Bluejay Firmware - Everyone should have this. It enables bidirectional dshot and rpm filtering and makes the quad run way better with longer flight times. It's an online configurator that flashes the flight controller built into the Mobula
This OscarLiang post describes how to flash your Mobula perfectly. The only changes I made were: both common parameter sliders I moved ALL the way up. I saw 2-3 YouTube videos and posts where they upped the startup power min and max to the most allowed and it runs perfectly. (When you are on the "select target" page, the default leaves it at BLHeli_S, you have to choose the drop down of "Bluejay")
I chose the latest version firmware, and 96khz pwm frequency is recommended for tinywhoops and that it what I used. Definitely play with the startup melody, they have super mario and star wars tones that your quad will make every time you power up. Every time I plug in a new battery I get the super mario bros theme song.
Go back to BF, on the Configuration tab, my gyro update was 8khz and pid loop frequency was 8khz. After I setup the OSD, my controller was running at about 75%+ (you can see the cpu load in bf) which is about the cutoff for being too high, according to my research. Setting it at 8khz gyro and 4khz pid loop was the smoothest running for me.
**Please setup your BUZZER - I did, and the captain drone video he walks you through setting it as a switch. This saved my drone countless times already. Once you crash into a bush and take your goggles off, you completely forget where you were flying. The buzzer helps track it down more than you would expect. Flip over turtle mode is a lifesaver also, that is mandatory.
On the Motors tab, turn on Bidirectional DShot, make sure dshot300 is selected. The mobula7 has 12 motor poles. You can test each motor individually to make sure they are spinning the right direction.
**At this point, I could see the video in my goggles, and I could power up and arm the quad, but it kept jumping, twitching, and cutting power every time I gave it throttle. After lots of things, I checked each motor. Run each one individually and feel if air is blowing above or below, if it's not below, then it's the wrong direction. The solution to this was the checkbox under quad x "motor direction is reversed". I turned that on, and it worked perfectly.
I moved throttle expo to .30 and I like it quite a bit, everything else I left the same.
Closing - I'm sure I forgot/confused a few crucial steps, I'm going to be updating and fact checking these steps to hopefully help someone who was stuck like me. I hope I described each problem I had well enough so that if it happens to someone else, they can figure it out.
Since starting to write this two days ago, I've ordered a couple more things:
TrueRC Singularity 20mm locking u.fl antenna (best antenna, fits under canopy)
Extra set of HM RS0802 20k motors. Mine are champs but if one breaks I want to swap it.
TBS Trimph Antenna RP-SMA male ($20) - Huge upgrade to omni antenna on EV800D, if I find a cheap patch cable that would be cool but I'm saving for digital
Extra Runcam Nano 3 Camera (I want to try the TW Pinch)
2x Mob7 v4 frames - mine has pretty bad road rash (tinywhoop.com has cool colors)
New canopy with camera mount (the first few times you take it apart, the tiny foam piece is a pain to keep under the camera
Have fun flying!!
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2024.05.06 18:18 FormerAd5115 Pegasus Editor - AOM Editor update

This is an Age of Mythology Editor update. It aims to make players feel comfortable while creating maps, placing objects and painting the terrain. Most features have been redesigned with nowadays UI patterns to avoid cognitive thinking from players and reaching objectives faster.
Features * Polished and organized navigation bar. * New UI theme. * Improved windows and buttons. * Modern icons. * Faithful thumbnails. * Camera control wheel.
Known Bugs * Going into settings and then saving changes makes the UI go crazy. * Roughen Settings window needs fixes. * Terrain thumbnails can't have curved corners. * Tree selection thumbnail does not appear when selecting a tree. * Camera window is half done. * Map grid button is not working
Download on Steam Workshop! https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=3240390983
submitted by FormerAd5115 to AgeofMythology [link] [comments]


2024.05.05 20:25 Sinspiration Executive Function Coaching made me feel like a failure because I can't learn how to plan. So I tested 4 AI auto-scheduling tools to see if they could do the planning for me. It worked.

When someone is near-sighted, we give them glasses. When someone canā€™t walk, we give them a wheelchair. But when someone has trouble planning, we make ā€˜em try harder. At least, thatā€™s what it felt like when I got diagnosed and started at the ADHD Treatment Center. After weeks of no progress with planning and organising tasks, my kind therapist kept encouraging me to try again, but I just kept walking into a wall. I couldnā€™t do it. At first I cried a lot, because after a lifetime of failing at things that seem simple for everyone else, it stung that I couldnā€™t even follow the therapy program specifically made for people with ADHD. But then it occurred to me: what if tech could replace some of the executive processes I struggle with, essentially outsourcing the task, giving me a piece of the brain ā€˜normalā€™ people have?
The relief when I got an auto-scheduling tool working for meā€¦ I canā€™t even describe it. I use a calendar now. Me! With an actual planning thatā€™s automatically up-to-date the whole time. I know this wouldnā€™t be a big deal for anyone with normal executive functions, but Iā€™ve never had this. I still felt like the stupidest kid in ADHD-class that I couldnā€™t do it the ā€˜normalā€™ way though, so I just said something offhand to my treatment coordinator at the Center, like: ā€œOh, by the way, the executive functioning coaching, I just couldn't do it, so Iā€™m having AI do it for me now.ā€ Waving a hand in the air, rolling my eyes at my own silly shortcomings, adopting this apologetic tone I often find myself using, basically saying; Iā€™m sorry that Iā€™m such an idiot I couldnā€™t even do X, Y or Z, and sorry to be cheating on your program, itā€™s me, not you, Iā€™m just incapable of doing anything correctly. (Yeah, ADHD did a number on my self-esteem, which was one of my main reasons for seeking help.) To my horror, she told me she had a crying girl in her office recently who quit therapy because she, like me, ā€˜just couldnā€™t do itā€™. In fact, patients with ADHD regularly get so desperate that they give up.
Then I spoke to the psychologist giving the Cognitive Behavioral Therapy to ADHD-patients and she estimated roughly half of her patients genuinely canā€™t learn to plan by themselves. HALF! So Iā€™m not some strange outlier at all. When I told her about auto-scheduling, her eyebrows shot up. ā€œWeā€™ve been teaching people to plan manually, but if what youā€™re saying existsā€¦ maybe we shouldnā€™t anymore.ā€
So hereā€™s the thing. I want this information to be out there on the internet for people like me, because we need it the most. And because most of the information on relevant planning tools that I found was written by and for neurotypicals. Neurotypicals seemingly like holistic approaches and pretty apps, sitting down with matcha tea or coffee in the morning for 15 minutes to plan their day. Good for them, but that option is a non-starter for my ADHD-brain. After 4 months with dexamphetamine, Iā€™ve also become a prescriber to the thought that ā€˜pills don't build skillsā€™. I love my meds, they help so much with focus and they calm down my overactive chipmunk-like brain, but theyā€™re not made of actual magic. Pills canā€™t give you an extra frontal lobe or a personality transplant. My executive skills are still weak or non-existent. Some of my issues are remarkably similar to people who experience brain damage after an accident, and when you think about it like a disability (like needing glasses, crutches or a hearing-aid) thereā€™s only so much that ā€˜trying harderā€™ or ā€˜talking about how that makes you feelā€™ can realistically accomplish.
IN SHORT (TL;DR) Yes, auto-scheduling tools can take over the brain-process of planning and I believe this can be helpful for the ADHD-brains struggling with planning, task management and knowing where to start. Of all the tools out there for tasks and planning, I found only 5 that promised to take over for my brain and think for me, namely: Motion, Trevor, Atlas, Reclaim and Skedpal. I looked at all these apps, tested 4 of them, and found that my brain is currently only compatible with Reclaim. YMMV though; there are very good reviews from people with ADHD for Skedpal and Motion as well. I highly recommend auto-scheduling for people with ADHD who are spinning their wheels trying to learn how to plan.
MY HISTORY WITH PLANNING AND MY EXPERIENCE TESTING THE TOOLS To explain how AI bridges the gap between what my brain can and canā€™t do, I will describe the 4 steps of standardised executive functioning training that I received as part of my ADHD-treatment and what worked for me. There are huge differences in how ADHD manifests. Not everyone struggles to the same degree with the same things. Below, Iā€™ll describe my history with planning, the trouble I ran into in my life and therapy and the upper limits of what my brain can manage. Getting a feel for my type of ADHD should help to determine in what sort of situations auto-scheduling can be helpful. If my story doesnā€™t spark recognition, some other tool might be a better fit.
Below the 4 therapy-steps, I describe my experience testing the 5 different tools and some of their specs/features. (Sorry, the first section is so long, skipping and scrolling down to the test-section is an option.)
Step 1: Pick a calendar and start using it. I felt a little uneasy when therapy started with this, because it reminded me of the first time I had to use a calendar in high school. I was almost 12 years old. The class-tutor handed out a bunch of papers with assignments from our teachers and told us to plan our homework in accordance with our schedule. Everybody grabbed their cute pocket diaries with pictures of ponies and cars, and started writing. Except for me. In the silent classroom, I tried to grasp what my classmates were doing, what they were looking at and how they all seemed to know what to write down, but I couldnā€™t figure it out. Eventually, I shoved the papers away and leaned back in my chair. The tutor looked up, surprised. ā€œWhat are you doing? You need to plan your homework,ā€ he told me. I shrugged and said: ā€œIā€™ll just remember it.ā€ He got angry, but I felt too embarrassed to admit that I was the only one who didnā€™t *understand* the assignment, especially with the whole class listening.
In the end, I never learned how to plan, forgot assignments, didnā€™t do the homework and was late a lot, which led to near-endless punishment for tardiness during my 6 years of high school. I cleaned the whole school more often than I can count and always thought that I would somehow get everything under control as I got older, but my last year was the worst by far. That year, a new ex-military headmaster digitised the system for recording lateness and ordered a crackdown. Teachers had to refuse entrance into the classroom if you were even a second late and if your school ID got scanned more than 5 minutes after the start of class, you were not allowed to enter anymore. The only scanner was attached to a computer all the way on the ground floor of the main building, so I always had to run there, find someone to operate and they had to start the system, which often led to time maxing out and me missing class. The first day of the crackdown, I got written up (well, scanned) SIX times. Dumbstruck, the headmaster asked how Iā€™d managed to do it. Truthfully, I had no idea. I just spaced out a lot and was surprised every time the bell rang and everyone stormed out of the classroom. Everyone, except for me. I still had to figure out how to declutter my little desk, how to fit everything in my backpack again, where I needed to go after that, not walk off in the wrong direction, that sort of thing.
The new rules led to a sharp drop in my attendance, which turned out to be illegal. Without ever meaning to, I was suddenly violating compulsory education laws and the government threatened community service for me and financial sanctions for my parents. The headmaster often had me called away from classes later in the day as well so I could receive new punishments that steadily grew in severity and duration from hours, to days, to weeks, to months and eventually to more daytime hours than were still left in the school year.
This all made sense, because if you punish a kid enough, theyā€™ll eventually learn how to plan, use a calendar, get more organised and be on time... right?
Wrong. I was missing so much class I was barely being taught anything anymore. Suddenly I found myself taking tests I never saw coming about subjects I never even heard about. I had to invent so many answers on the spot that one teacher started reading my 'hilarious' tests to his wife to make her laugh. My grades plummeted. I basically had to be on the school premises from dusk till dawn for all my detention-hours, even though I had to cycle to school for over 15 miles (and back) and had to work in the evenings. I stopped having breakfast, had no time for dinner before work, was always home late again and couldnā€™t sleep enough because I had to get up in the middle of the night to report for duty in the headmasterā€™s office long before sunrise. Somewhere in the meantime, I had to try and intercept the threatening letters from the government so I could hide them from my parents. Exhausted, I started daydreaming and messing up even more, which led to more threats, punishment, missed classes, forgotten assignments, bad grades, but no matter how hard I tried, I couldnā€™t seem to improve. Even though I desperately wanted to. It was a Catch-22 situation.
The pressure was absurd and itā€™s become a point of reference for me. If my brain had been capable of planning and getting organised, surely I would have learned then.
Instead, I was in serious danger of not graduating at all, after a while. By that point, I was running around half-dressed, cycling in a skirt with bare legs and wet hair in the middle of winter, always in a panic, pale, underfed, with dark circles under my eyes, until a couple of teachers seemed to decide that enough was enough. One by one, they defied the headmaster by pretending they couldnā€™t see me opening doors after the second bell and insisting my homework was suddenly always done (it wasnā€™t). I had an excellent memory, so the simple act of letting me stay in their classrooms during the lessons catapulted me to the top of those respective classes. I graduated, but only thanks to their mercy.
I had to keep showing up for punishment daily until I was excused a couple of weeks before the national final exams. Nobody ever seemed to question whether I was unorganised on purpose or if I *deserved* to be the kid who was punished more than anyone else in the school. It only seemed to confuse the obvious punks who were sometimes in detention with me for things like using graffiti on an outbuilding, sabotaging a teacherā€™s car or building a bomb in an empty can of Pringles to blow up a toilet. The boys asked skeptically what boring little me could possibly have done that was so bad and their questions made sense; I was this polite girl in a skirt who would never even attempt to stick chewing gum under a desk. But I didnā€™t know why or how everything went wrong all the time. Teachers had been punishing me ever since I was 5 when I regularly had to stand in the hallway outside the classroom for being late or loud, staying after school because my handwriting was supposedly bad on purpose, not trying hard enough to learn how to tie my shoes and failing, drifting off without finishing something, etc, etc.
When I went to college for my bachelorā€™s degree, I met the first person who realised I simply needed help. He also was a student and commented on my near-empty pocket diary; Iā€™d only scribbled in the games and training sessions with the sports team Iā€™d joined. He suddenly understood my repeated questions to the tune of ā€˜Wait, what assignment? A deadline? TOMORROW?!ā€™ As the son of two psychologists, he connected my chronic lateness, the daydreaming, the clumsiness, the chaotic demeanour and the way I never seemed to stop moving with my bare dayplanner and he sat me down behind a computer to sign me up for Gmail and Google Calendar. He also introduced me to Wunderlist. He thought it would help with me losing and forgetting things all the time. It helped somewhat, especially when emails pertaining to events automatically started showing up in the Calendar. It was better than nothing, but it didnā€™t change my style of dumpster-fire-management to ā€˜planā€™ my day. (Or, more accurately: have the day happen to me in a blur.) Students with ADHD in college also started diagnosing me (almost from across the room sometimes) and spontaneously offered their Ritalin. They were an awesome bunch. Unfortunately, methylphenidate made me fall asleep in the middle of the day, so I thought it was a dead end.
After college, I believe I was supposed to install and configure iCal for 2 separate professional jobs? I never got around to it. (The quality of my work was always good, so people thought it was odd, but nobody complained.)
Through the years, I started using Google Calendar more for birthdays, other recurring items, Facebook events, weddings, funerals and vacations. I tried to practise with appointments and reminders. This was a little hit and miss, especially because I still forgot to actually open Google Calendar and I also tended to not prepare for these happenings until the last minute. My husband, who met me when I was 25, attached his calendar to mine pretty soon in the relationship to help out, put things on my calendar and remind me of stuff. It didn't hurt that he has a top psychologist in his family, who noticed my ADHD without me even mentioning anything. Around the same time my husband heard an item on the radio about ADHD in women and called from the car yelling: ā€œYou have ADHD! You have all the symptoms! Everything! If you donā€™t have it, Iā€™ll eat a hat. Iā€™ll eat a store filled with hats.ā€ I still didn't see the point of treatment then, but heā€™s been operating as if I were already diagnosed ever since. In the years that followed, two of my siblings got diagnosed before me.
So that's my natural level of executive functioning. Technically, I have a calendar, and a husband who helps me use it. Mission accomplished. (Not really though).
Step 2: Gather all your tasks in one place. So my therapist thought it was suboptimal for me to keep writing down tasks on my hand, in a few notebooks, in two separate bullet journals, on random pieces of papers lying around like envelopes and receipts, in Todoist, in Google Tasks and on post-its in many shades stuck everywhere. Go figure. She wanted me to pick 1 place. I glared at her. But the concept made sense.
It really happens too often that I lose a task because I throw away a piece of paper, a gust of wind blows an old post-it behind my desk or I accidentally use hand sanitizer dissolving the ink on my hand. Thatā€™s just too silly. And that's in addition to the issue that I forget tasks simply because it's in a notebook I haven't opened in two weeks.
So I picked Todoist, because I already use it to make sense of small shared projects and I like it. I put most of my tasks in there (itā€™s a lot). I also installed a large widget on my phone to quickly enter tasks in the inbox as soon as I think of them. It's been working pretty well.
Step 3: Add a simple 1-2-3 priority and deadlines to your tasks This is where I started to feel nauseous. Iā€™ve never distinguished between tasks by different levels in priority. I only added an exclamation mark to a list every now and again, for tasks that needed to happen ASAP (so, last week).
To my surprise, and maybe thanks to the dexamphetamines Iā€™ve been prescribed, it wasnā€™t as undoable as I thought. Turns out, Todoist has different colors for priorities (I vaguely noticed the feature before, but never used it). Grey for no priority, blue for Priority 3, orange for P2 and red for P1. The colors make sense to me. Gauging the priority of a task seems hard, but I can tell you what color a task is. I also know when a task has a real deadline and when one doesnā€™t. It took some effort and I struggled a bit with focus and decision fatigue, but I got it done and was quite proud of myself. Until step 4.
Step 4: Each morning, review the priorities youā€™ve assigned to your tasks, change priority levels, and plan your day and week accordingly. I had the biggest Error404. She wanted me to whatnow? I gave it a try. Stared at the list. Stared at the calendar. Went to get tea. Tried again. Got distracted for the rest of the day. Had to start over the next day because time had passed in which Iā€™d officially planned to do something else. Spent half the day trying to ā€˜review the priority of tasksā€™ to plan, but got distracted by a related tasks that I thought I could knock off quickly, but it took much longer than I anticipated and I ended up not doing what I should have done that day. Gave up. Showed up empty handed at the ADHD Treatment Centre after one week.
The second week yielded essentially the same result. After the third week, I hadnā€™t even gotten around to giving it another go. My therapist was all encouraging words, reassuring me that setbacks were normal and that I just had to keep trying. But I already knew that this bar was too high. I felt resigned. I had such high hopes for ADHD-therapy and medication. I thought it would magically solve my problems and that somebody would finally tell me the secret to an organized life that had eluded me for all these years. Instead, the instructions were... very basic. And dexamphetamine did not enable me to sit down each day and just ā€˜reviewā€™ tasks and ā€˜planā€™ my day and add ā€˜time blocksā€™. Like itā€™s easy, instead of a mind bendingly complicated puzzle that would consume a considerable amount of mental energy at the start of each day. (Which is how I know itā€™s never going to happen. Iā€™ve learned that I need something simple enough that I can do it on my worst day.)
After 5 weeks without progress at the ADHD Treatment Centre, I mentioned that I sometimes use Goblin Tools to break down tasks. It helps me to figure out what has to be done, and it helps me get started. Goblin Tools was new for my therapist, so I heard myself explain it was just this website with AI that helps to break down tasks or figure out what to eat or how long something takes. I have it listed in my bookmarks bar in Google Chrome. When I left her office, I thought to myself that I needed a goblin Ɣnd a pixy on my shoulder to tell me what to do. I stopped walking. What if pixies existed already as different AI tools?
Testing AI scheduling tools There are many organisational apps, some of which are very sleek and advanced, like Monday, Sunsama and Akiflow. However; they still require you to plan your day manually and thatā€™s precisely the thing I struggle with. Which left me with Atlas AI, Trevor AI, Skedpal, Motion and Reclaim AI. (Purists will tell you that some of the software has as much to do with AI as the original Roller Coaster Tycoon, but for all intents and purposes, Iā€™m going to refer to it as AI because thatā€™s what we call it now even though itā€™s technically not artificial intelligence. Before ā€˜AIā€™ became a hype people would just refer to this as auto-scheduling or smart scheduling.)
Atlas AI This really is the most AI-rich of the selection. It looks promising for a lot more than schedule automation because its aim is to replace a real assistent, but itā€™s still in beta and I found that my ā€˜assistantā€™ didnā€™t always follow through. For instance, it can set timers, but it forgot to remind me when time was up, even though it said it would. It also planned only half of the appointments in Google Calendar that it said in black and white it would schedule. When I asked why this was the case, it replied that maybe it was my internet connection? Nice try, robot assistant who clearly learned everything from humans, including lying. Maybe next year or when itā€™s not in beta anymore I'll give it another go, but right now, I canā€™t afford for tasks and appointments to just disappear. (Itā€™s also going to be quite expensive and geared towards business use, not personal organisation, so it was a long shot anyway.)
This left the 4 candidates more clearly dedicated to auto-scheduling my tasks on Google Calendar; Trevor AI, Skedpal, Motion App and Reclaim AI.
Trevor AI Trevor is the official ā€˜AIā€™ partner of Todoist, so it made sense to try this one, but I thought integration wasnā€™t that smooth. The ā€˜smart schedulingā€™ only happened after I accepted suggestions and that worked only for things Iā€™d attached a date to. I often donā€™t add a solid deadline to tasks, so Trevor suggested that I buy a present for Fathers Day come June ASAP even though the task had no (=grey) priority attached and I did have much more pressing tasks at the time (this was back in april). I tried to get auto-scheduling to work, but found that I just had to drag tasks in myself to get what I wanted. I also couldnā€™t really figure out how it would automatically adjust my schedule after, you know, life happened, even though thatā€™s listed as a feature. I got frustrated. Part of my tasks seemed to be missing. I actually tried twice and also removed Trevor twice.
If you prefer dragging tasks into a schedule yourself and only smart-schedule some items, or smart schedule by hand, this might be a decent option. But in that case, there are many other apps who assist with that, like Sunsama. A big part is also my brain. I couldnā€™t intuitively use Trevor and kept clicking on the wrong things, had to undo scheduling, that sort of thing. My biggest issue was that I couldn't get fully automated scheduling to work, but that could be my fault. Itā€™s my impression Trever wasnā€™t originally meant to do that though, itā€™s more of a smart tool to help you see your tasks and your calendar side-by-side and decide what goes where, with some suggestions from Trevor.
Trevor is relatively affordable. You can use a basic version for free, or upgrade for smart features all the Pro-features for $3.99/mo or $36/year.
Skedpal Skedpal is reasonably (medium) priced software for smart scheduling with a wide array of options and great reviews. Project management is one of the extra attractive features. But I also noticed the interface looks a little bare bones and dated. The instruction videos are 5 years old and the blog was deserted 2 years ago. I found some old information on an app that made it seem like it wasnā€™t being updated? Skedpal is asking for 15 dollars a month or 10 dollars per month with a yearly subscription, which is decent, but not cheap. Ideally, youā€™d pick the yearly option in this case, but the idea of paying 120 dollars up front for a tool that might have been quietly abandoned or wonā€™t receive updates anymore made me pause. If Iā€™m going to invest money and the time to learn how to use a tool, Iā€™d like to be able to trust that itā€™s going be around in the coming years. So I put Skedpal on my Plan B-pile.
However, I checked this today, to make sure, and noticed there were actually some recent tweets on X by Skedpal and also a message about beta-testing for Skedpal 3 last Januari. Skedpal is probably alive and well.I found various reviews for Skepal on social media, including from someone with ADHD, who said Skedpal worked better for them than Motion. This is saying something because there seems to be a consensus amongst reviewers that Motion is the best auto-scheduling tool on the market. It wasnā€™t for me though.
Motion AI After reading all the positive reviews about the high price tag that was deemed to be worth it (34 dollars a month, or $19 p/m when billed annually), my expectations were high as well. I really spent time trying to get Motion to work for me in the trial week, installing Zapier, importing tasks, getting several different apps integrated, but I found Motion to be annoyingly glitchy. I'm not the only one complaining about it either, so I'm pretty sure it wasn't my computer this time.
I ran into a particularly frustrating bug and I tried everything to solve it. I even changed the times in which tasks could be scheduled to free space to put something in, but it still wouldnā€™t schedule it and kept showing a ā€˜scheduling-conflictā€™ for no reason. I could solve all the other ā€˜scheduling conflictsā€™ easily enough, but this block of 2 hours just wouldnā€™t click into the free space for 2 hours and I couldnā€™t find out why. I spent hours and hours, watched videos in an effort to troubleshoot, some twice, kept asking the AI on the Motion website what could be the problem and I really, really couldnā€™t get it to work for me. (My frustration boiled over at one point; it wasn't pretty.)
The options on paper are amazing and endless. The task management feature is like Monday, with projects moving through stages, and it's automatized. Or you can star an important e-mail in Gmail, which can trigger Zapier to send it as a task to Motion, then Motion automatically puts it on your Calendar. (However, you could also add the e-mail to Google Tasks or Todiost via the buttons or plug-ins, and if those task managers are connected to any of the auto-scheduling tools listed here, the email would also show up on you Calendar.) It's enough to make anyone salivate.
Motion is not a match for my brain though, in part because of the bug, but it also felt a bit rigid. The system prefers that you put tasks straight into Motion directly, which makes sense and is possible, but auto-schedulers obviously require information on a task, like priority, how much time you estimate a task would take and a deadline. In Motion, a task without that information wonā€™t be scheduled at all. But I know that Iā€™m the kind of person who shoots a half-finished thought in the Todoist inbox without adding details until later (though I could forget) and I also donā€™t believe that every task needs those details (for instance, because itā€™s low priority and would roughly take me an hour, which should be default). I also couldnā€™t download/import tasks from Todoist and Google Tasks directly; only new ones or solo tasks came through with Zapier, and I spent a lot of time on that as well to get the prompts working. In the end, the tool was too hard for my brain to use and I also thought it wasnā€™t worth the high price point for me. However: the price is considerably lower for teams and thatā€™s supposedly where Motion shines, also because of the project management with stages feature. I think itā€™s not originally geared towards personal use.
Reclaim AI I was flabbergasted that Reclaim immediately worked for me, I didn't think it was going to happen anymore. It hadnā€™t made the top of the list for me for several reasons. The look didnā€™t appeal to me much, the only app is a web-app and reviewers online consistently declared Motion the better app. I also read on the internet in older posts that people were missing certain functions that Motion had, like automatically re-scheduling tasks you havenā€™t marked as completed, or theming days for certain tasks, or how the program would prioritise longer tasks over urgent ones. So I'd written Reclaim off. But as soon as I tried Reclaim anyway, I stumbled across all the supposedly missing functions in the settings and instruction videos. Maybe the tool has been improved recently? Reclaim does still have an issue with recurring tasks from Todoist though. I didn't have those, so it wasn't an issue for me, but it probably is for a lot of people. Reclaim also leaves the big task management to other, existing apps and just plans everything. Motion and Skedpal do also incorporate project management within the tool. Reclaim seems to be geared a little more towards personal planning and also incorporating habits during the day, like taking a walk outside.
How visually attractive it is, is also easily adjusted (Iā€™d assumed you were stuck with hip shades of purple), but it's actually irrelevant. Iā€™m starting to feel like thatā€™s almost the best thing about it. Reclaim is much more a tool doing the thinking for you in the background, unseen. I donā€™t really need to change my behaviour much. Iā€™m still using my own task manager to braindump in and Reclaim schedules everything in Google Calendar. Because the connection goes both ways, I technically don't have to open Reclaim at all. Iā€™ve taken to adding the estimated time a task will take in Todoist itself, but you can also do it in Reclaim or in Google Tasks if that's your task manager (Reclaim automatically sends you the shorthand when you connect Google Tasks). You can also change the default duration of tasks.
For the first time in my life, I have a fully planned schedule, exactly as I need it, in the time slots where I need it. Every day. Like a proper adult. I'm almost giddy. (Sure, Iā€™m still severely underestimating how long tasks will take, but I can just add time or the machine will automatically reschedule it for me. Iā€™ve set automatic rescheduling to after 1 day in the settings. Default is 3 days or only when time is added.)
I know what to do and when. I can stop worrying about that thing that Iā€™m probably forgetting that I should really do first, because itā€™s all there in Google Calendar. And whenever I disagree with the planning, I can change the priority in Todoist/Google Tasks, go to Reclaim directly and drag the task to where I need it, or bump the task down the list showing the order decided by Reclaim. So that's pretty flexible. If tasks need more time to complete, I can just add time or click on the + button. When I add an appointment in Google Calendar, Reclaim automatically reschedules my whole calendar. When I add a task in ToDoist or Google Tasks, itā€™s automatically added to Google Calendar based on the priority and/or deadline Iā€™ve added to the task.
When life happens and I only manage half the planned tasks that day (or much less), I used to have a brain-error and think ā€˜oh no, I did all that hard work making a planning for the week for nothing, EVERYTHING IS RUINEDā€™. Seriously. But Reclaim just re-plans those tasks for the next day and shuffles everything else down the line. Itā€™s just so nice to not have to think about it myself. To actually see tasks planned in time-frames, making visual what I could achieve that week (and what is definitely outside of the realm of possibilities because time is a limited resource, no matter what my brain says). Having a schedule that's always up to date makes using a calendar a lot easier.
I guess it was time, too. A long list of tasks never indicated anything to me anyway. Everything could be 5 minutes long or 10 hours long. Who knew? It felt abstract, even when I tried the Alastair Method in Bullet Journal. (Still my favourite way to do it manually on paper though, I just can't keep it up for more than 2 weeks.) Seeing all the tasks scheduled gives me more of a feeling of urgency that a static list doesn't. So not only do I know where to get started, on what and when, I actually get more done because I donā€™t wake up thinking ā€˜ooooh, another saturdayā€¦ nothing plannedā€¦ letā€™s learn to make homemade blocks of soap even though I still have 10 bottles of shower gel left!ā€™
You can use Reclaim for free, surprisingly. I think itā€™s currently the only one on this list that auto-schedules for free. Free use is possible with a few basic apps like Google Calendar and Google Tasks, which makes auto-scheduling accessible for students with ADHD as well. Use with more specialised apps, including Zapier and Todoist, or extra scheduling links (for booking online meetings with clients, for instance) require a subscription starting at $10 a month or $8 when billed yearly.
I went back to my therapist and could tell her I made progress in a way I didnā€™t think possible. So if this is you, donā€™t give up hope yet and hold off on quitting therapy. See if there is a tool for you out there and how far it takes you.
Any auto-scheduling tool will definitely have a learning curve for most people, and you do need to look at the settings to determine what you want the program to do. It will cost time to set up, so it's smart to get a feel whether or not a tool would work for you, if you'd be able to add a level of priority or deadline to tasks at some point and what you'd need the tool to do. But there are plenty of tutorials on the internet, both long and short to help you get started. Goblin Tools is also free and nice to use for breaking down tasks to help get started some more (Iā€™ll just put the links in a comment below). I hope that tools like these will continue to develop, so people who struggle with executive functioning can really lean on them. Just like glasses, a hearing aid or crutches.
I hope this helps someone out there. Thanks for reading this insane amount of text.
P.S. For simple recurring daily routines, I like the app Tiimo and a smart watch. But thatā€™s a different story. :)
submitted by Sinspiration to adhdwomen [link] [comments]


2024.05.02 03:40 cheinyeanlim Rabbit releases the R1's first software update

Rabbit releases the R1's first software update
Exciting news for Rabbit R1 users! šŸŽ‰ The first software update is here, promising up to 5x improved idle battery performance, enhanced music playback UI, and more reliable Bluetooth connectivity. Upgrade your Rabbit experience today! #RabbitR1 #TechNews
Stay ahead of the curve with the latest trends in tech and marketing ā€“ join our subreddit community martechnewser today for instant notifications!
https://preview.redd.it/hokq4piu3xxc1.jpg?width=640&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=2780a43b14ff20de1c05472218ffea63e96fb9aa
  • The first major software update for the Rabbit R1 has been released just a week after its launch, significantly improving idle battery performance - a critical early issue for users.
  • Apart from battery life enhancements, the update includes improvements to the music playback interface, Bluetooth reliability, and a fix for a serious compatibility issue with certain cars.
  • The update is easily accessible to R1 device owners, requiring only a connection to power and Wi-Fi to start the download process.
  • Despite the improvements brought by this update, there remains criticism about the R1ā€™s utility, hinting that it still lacks in functionality specific to users' needs.
  • The frequent and rapid release of updates showcases the company's commitment to refining the product and addressing user feedback.
One Rabbit R1 device appeared to have been bricked when plugged into a car due to compatibility issues, which were among the problems addressed in this critical software update.
"Todayā€™s update consists of two parts: an OTA update pushed directly to R1 devices and a cloud update to Rabbit OS."
Despite the significant improvements made in the software update, the article emphasizes that the Rabbit R1 still has a long way to go in terms of widening its array of functionalities, which currently appears to be a central critique among users and reviewers alike. This reveals an ongoing challenge in the tech industry: the balancing act between hardware capabilities and software innovation to meet user expectations.
submitted by cheinyeanlim to martechnewser [link] [comments]


2024.04.30 12:36 rgocal Drosera Launcher (Developer Preview)

Drosera Launcher (Developer Preview)
Greetings! A few weeks back, I had published a thread showing off a launcher project that I have been working on, using the Logitech Gcloud as my main driver for development and I think we're at a certain milestone. If your eager to get your hands on Project Drosera and check out what I've been working on, than that time has come.
Notice : This is a developer preview of which means that it is no where near its final product form and what you are exposed to is subject to change. I also expect that you have the knowledge to switch to and from different launcher apps and have some knowledge of the android OS. (Tip: You can download my Launcher Ops app from Google play to help switch different launcher apps easier). This launcher shouldn't be used as a daily driver yet, just as a demo. Drosera Launcher is expected to launch on Google Play or equavalent, once it's finished and will have paid features tied to it. During the developer preview, their will not be anything put behind paywalls. You are free to use it as you wish but you should not distribute it.
~Introduction~
This is project Drosera, A unique android homescreen that has been in development for a few months now. It has been built from scratch and designed for a specific line of devices that excludes mobile phones (I mean maybe like "Ultra" variants with wide screens) but this launcher is not intended for the touch screen environments. We are supporting Tablets, Handhelds, Desktop environments (specifically Bliss OS) and eventually Android TV devices. The goal of this launcher was to Develop a homescreen that brought users a homescreen experience that felt like a console experience. Now, Im aware there are a few on the playstore as we speak and maybe a few on github unreleased but this launcher aims towards a different crowd. When you use Drosera, The launcher's goal is to present the user with a daily routine as like a console would. Present the user with it's most used games or apps and just make the route easier for them while presenting a rather attractive user experience. A gamepad is required to navigate this launcher (PS4/5, Xbox, Steam Controller, Stadia, etc). This launcher is also being designed to suggest cloud/stream gaming apps in its suggestion panel.
I am using the Logitech Gcloud as the main daily driver for development. Altho the Gcloud has some android features under lockdown, it still serves as a rightful driver for development.
(The Gcloud/Abxylute currently don't offer a way to view recent apps or manage running processes without the system launcher. I am currently working on some backdoor todo so using accessibility. A suggestion is to access the developer menu and set running processes to none or 1)
Drosera Launcher is built with a mixture of Android Leanback, Material Design and some custom implementations to make this work the way I wanted it too. (For the Gcloud, that means using the screen mirroring feature does not effect the launcher. Drosera will adapt to any screen size or should atleast...)
The Homescreen is comprised of 2 sections. Your default App Store and your recent apps and when navigating downward, your presented with quick actions and suggested apps for cloud gaming and communication. Surrounding the homescreen is an interactive display that shows you button input, hardware status updates, homescreen indicators and access to Launcher sheet menus. Everything you see is subject to change and still heavily in development as a side note.
What has been achieved so far...
-Interactive Hardware Indicators that tell you the connection status of wifi and bluetooth (certain permissions where needed to access this information)
-A Digital Clock indicator that can be binded to a user app of choice for Clock app shortcuts when expanded (with its own Calendar info when expanded)
-A notification Indicator that shows you high priority notifications (with notification management options in development)
-Battery icon that shows hardware information and charging information
-Displays the devices android user account name in top right (this will be expanded on in due time. The GCloud and Abxylute does not support this and will have an alternative feature)
-Interactive Button displays that update based on the item in focus (Some issues suggest they don't always update properly)
-The ability to set a default app store that is installed on your device (Playstore, Amazon app store, Galaxy store, etc)
-Recent Apps panel that shows useage info over time and some other interesting features in development. (This may be replaced or have an alternative in the near future)
-Adaptive Leanback cards that take in adaptive icons to form their shape.
-Icon Pack Support with Card Icon options in development
-A custom Preference screen built from the ground up to support Dpad navigation (Checkmark preferences may require you to double check them before they actually apply the settings)
-OTA Updates (for the developer preview)
-Horizontal Scroll App Drawer with custom category options in development
-Screen size optimized Leanback cards that are designed to match your screen display pixels.
-Notifications sheet that displays all of your current notifications (Buggy, might be revamped)
-A Guide sheet (in development, more info to come)
-A settings navigation sheet (shortcuts will be binded to keyboards)
-Mouse and Keyboard support in the works
-Ambient sounds and UI Sounds (toggleable)
Current issues I am aware of...
-The homescreen does not transition well back and forth from the App Drawer. Sometimes hitting a Home button fixes this.
-Some transition animations may be sluggish or time incorrectly
-Not all Handhelds have the same buttons so we will be working on a key binding window eventually
-Not all Icon Packs behave well, we recommend any that are adaptive
-Button Legends sometimes overlap
-Theme colors may not be correct in some spots (We are working on a theme engine)
-Notification Page may have notificaton data mixed up with notifications
-Some menu items are placeholders or empty altogether
~Conclusion~
Il update this thread as new development takes place and new milestones are reached. I wont be announcing every update as I release but I will talk about milestone releases.
All I want from the testers, in this round of testing, is feedback. How do you feel about the launcheexperience? What are your first impressions and what would you change if something didn't feel appealing to you. Unless it's breaking your chance to test the launcher, im not interested in bug reports right now as everything is experimental. If the launcher just fails and does something completely wacko, im not really interested to hear about it just yet.
~Getting Connected~
I have 2 communities you are welcomed to join as I dont keep an eye on the forums much
Im looking forward to some of your feedback on the project and ill see you all around! Thanyou for taking interest in Project Drosera. I understand that the GCloud doesn't have much going for it right now as far as custom work and development goes, so this is rather exciting to see for me and probably yourself.
submitted by rgocal to logitechgcloud [link] [comments]


2024.04.28 19:31 Jsonsmith01 Automatic Solution of how to create an ebook Sqribble Ebook Creator Software Review Kindle Create

Automatic Solution of how to create an ebook Sqribble Ebook Creator Software Review Kindle Create
Letā€™s face it, we all want more traffic, more subscribers and more daily sales. And thereā€™s one simple solution that still works like gangbusters for this ā€” eBooks.
Whether itā€™s a powerful lead magnet such as a free report or whitepaper, or a Kindle book that you sell dailyā€¦ digital books are still an awesome way to attract traffic and sales for almost any type of business.
But thereā€™s just one problem ā€” creating them can cause all kinds of headaches. Writing, formatting, designingā€¦ it can take days or even weeks to create an eBook, plus a steep learning curve and a handful of expensive tools youā€™ll need to masterā€¦ before youā€™ve even hit publish!
But thereā€™s a brand-new tool on the market that promises to change all that.
Itā€™s called Sqribble.
https://preview.redd.it/u38q4k4v99xc1.jpg?width=1200&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=14ef345aa7b95f3212dcb8aed3ac0769bb539ab4
>>> Click here to get a Demo for Sqribble <<<
What is Sqribble?
Sqribble is a cloud-based tool that allows you to create eBooks (reports, whitepapers, etc.) in seconds. It uses readyā€”made templates and drag nā€™ drop design features that make self-publishing your eBooks a breeze.
How does it work?
When you log into Sqribble, youā€™ll see a bunch of eBook templates to choose from. These are all based on different categories, so youā€™ll need to find one that matches your market/topic/niche.
Once youā€™ve selected the template you want to use, you simply click ā€œviewā€ to see how your eBook will look (donā€™t worry, weā€™ll add your content next.)
In this view screen, you can see how the book will be laid out and get a feel for the style. If you donā€™t like it, you can always go back and choose another template (thereā€™s 50 templates to choose from, and you can also edit the templates too, in all kinds of ways.)
Youā€™ll notice that the layouts and designs are very slick. They look like professional publications!
Next, youā€™ll be asked where you want to source your content for the book. You can choose:
ā€” Grab from a URL
ā€” Start from scratch
ā€” Copy and paste manually
ā€” Upload Word File
ā€” Start from Article Collection
Letā€™s take a closer look at these options.
ā€” Grab from a URL
This allows you to insert any URL you want, and Sqribble will automatically pull the content from that page and insert into your book. It strips the html code and only inserts the text from the page. This is my fave method, because it saves a ton of time, and allows you to use expert content (with credits) so you can target topics and niches youā€™re not an expert in!
ā€” Start from scratch
As it sounds, this option allows you to enter your content like youā€™d enter it into a Word document. You just type straight into the page.
ā€” Copy and paste manually
This allows you to copy content from anywhere you want, and paste into the book, where the book will format and lay it out for you professionally.
ā€” Upload Word File
You can get Sqribble to pull your content straight from a Word document, stripping out any code or weird formatting.
ā€” Start from Article Collection
Here you can extract content from Sqribbleā€™s huge library of private label articles which you can use for free, without crediting authors or linking to the source. Itā€™s another great way to quickly fill your book with content, for free!
Finally, youā€™ll move to an editing screen, where you can resize text, move content around, edit text directly, add media, links, lists, call to action areas, new pages, and a whole bunch of other options for customizing the look and feel of individual pages or the entire book.
You can even add new pages that use a totally different layout to the rest of your book, giving you a huge amount of flexibility and endless options for your book.
While editing, another thing I really liked was the Themes option. With a single click, you can instantly change the color theme and font style of your entire book. Itā€™s like giving your book a new ā€œskinā€ and itā€™s just one more feature that sets Sqribble apart from the other tools out there.
Finally, when youā€™re ready to publish, you hit the little ā€œGenerate eBookā€ button in the top right corner of the screen and voila, your book is now ready!
You can either open the book in a browser to preview it quickly or save as PDF.
Is Sqribble right for you?
If youā€™re already creating lead magnets or eBooks for sale, then I have no doubt that Sqribble is going to save you hours of work and tons of money on freelancers (if you outsource the design or writing side of it.)
For that reason, I truly believe that Sqribble is well worth the investment and perfectly suited for most small to medium size businesses, especially self-publishers and info marketers.
Itā€™s also a great tool to use if youā€™re a freelancer or agency, working with clients to create professional eBooks (includes commercial rights, plus a done for you agency website, which is a big bonus!). You could easily charge $100ā€™s for this service, and with Sqribble, you could get the work done in way less time than it wouldnā€™t normally take you.
The bad
ā€” Some of my favorite features are locked behind upsells (3D covers and Flipbook feature)
ā€” When inserting content from a URL, you need to cite the URL source and/or credit the original author of the content, if itā€™s not your own (this isnā€™t really Sqribbleā€™s fault ā€” itā€™s just the law!)
The good
ā€” Easy to use
ā€” Glitch free
ā€” Unlimited use (one-time payment)
The awesome
ā€” Tons of excellent eBook templates
ā€” Professional page layouts
ā€” Automatic content
ā€” 3D cover creator (available through upsells)
ā€” Flipbook creator (available through upsells)
ā€” Free commercial agency + website included!
Price
A one-time $47 (later will be increased to $197).
About the creator
Sqribble has been developed by Adeel Chowdhry, who is a well-known internet entrepreneur and best seller, with over ten years of experience and has previously created worldwide hits such as Pixel Studio FX which sold tens of thousands of units all around the world. Heā€™s known for creating high quality professional solutions and I expect no less from Sqribble.
Overall verdict
Thereā€™s no doubt, Sqribble is a powerful eBook creation tool. Unlike other tools, itā€™s packed with everything you need to start cranking out professional looking books, reports, whitepapers and more in seconds.
With automatic content, drag nā€™ drop editing, plus a host of templates and designs ready to customize, youā€™d struggle to find a more seamless eBook publishing tool than this.
Being cloud based is a big bonus too. No need to download any software that clogs up your computer. Whether youā€™re casually publishing books or youā€™re constantly creating lead gen reports for yourself or clients, Sqribble can ā€” and WILL ā€” save you hours of hassle and potentially thousands of dollars in freelance fees over the coming months and years. For that reason alone, it gets my full seal of approval.
>>> Click here to download Sqribble <<<
submitted by Jsonsmith01 to SideHustler_EarnMoney [link] [comments]


2024.04.25 01:10 raouftgod Ai Agents Army Review 2024: Revolutionizing Digital Strategies

Ai Agents Army Review
In the ever-evolving landscape of digital innovation, securing a competitive edge is paramount for businesses navigating the realms of automation and marketing. However, amidst the myriad tools and solutions available, navigating the intricacies of AI-driven content creation can be a daunting endeavor for entrepreneurs and marketers alike. Enter Ai Agents Army ā€” a revolutionary platform crafted by seasoned online entrepreneurs Jai Sharma and Atul Pareek, poised to redefine the landscape of marketing automation.
Harnessing the cutting-edge power of artificial intelligence, Ai Agents Army promises to usher in a new era of efficiency and productivity, offering a comprehensive suite of features designed to streamline marketing tasks and elevate performance. Whether youā€™re a seasoned marketer seeking to optimize lead generation efforts or an aspiring entrepreneur eager to harness the potential of AI, Ai Agents Army stands ready to revolutionize your approach to content creation and marketing automation.
With its intuitive interface and diverse roster of niche-specific AI agents, Ai Agents Army empowers users to automate a myriad of marketing endeavors, from content creation and lead generation to social media management and PPC advertising. Join us as we delve into the depths of Ai Agents Army, exploring its functionality, standout features, and the myriad advantages it brings to the table in our comprehensive review.

Ai Agents Army Overview

- Product Name: Ai Agents Army
- Product Creator: Jai Sharma et al
- Launch Date: 4/22/2024
- Official Website: Official Website Link
- Price: $37.00
- Money-Back Guarantee:YES, 30 Days Money-Back Guarantee
- Bonuses: YES
- Discount Code:ā€Earlyā€ for $5 Discount
- Recommendation: Highly Recommended
- My Rating: 9.75/10
<<<>>> Get Ai Agents Army Now! <<<>>>

What is Ai Agents Army?

Ai Agents Army is a cutting-edge cloud-based platform powered by advanced artificial intelligence, designed to automate various marketing tasks seamlessly. From content creation to lead generation and beyond, Ai Agents Army offers a diverse range of AI agents tailored to different marketing domains.
Why Choose Ai Agents Army?
Ai Agents Army isnā€™t just another marketing tool ā€” itā€™s a catalyst for exponential growth in digital marketing endeavors. Hereā€™s why you should choose Ai Agents Army:
  1. Diverse AI Agents: Ai Agents Army offers a plethora of niche-specific AI agents, each proficient in executing designated marketing tasks with precision.
  2. Automated Workflows: Streamline complex marketing sequences with automated workflows, saving time and effort.
  3. Content Creation Capabilities: Generate high-quality content for blogs, social media, email campaigns, and more, effortlessly.
  4. Lead Generation Functionality: Capture and nurture leads with optimized lead magnets, email swipes, and sales funnels.
  5. Seamless Integrations: Integrate Ai Agents Army seamlessly with popular platforms like email autoresponders and CRMs, enhancing workflow efficiency.

How Does Ai Agents Army Work?

Unlocking the power of Ai Agents Army is as simple as:
  1. Accessing the Dashboard: Log in to the cloud-based dashboard.
  2. Selecting AI Agents: Choose AI agents tailored to your marketing needs.
  3. Aigning Tasks: Assign tasks to AI agents via voice commands or text prompts.
  4. Generating Content: Watch as AI agents process inputs and generate human-like content or assets.
  5. Utilizing Content: Use the generated content across various marketing channels to amplify your reach and engagement.
Ai Agents Army Demo Video šŸ‘‰https://aiagentsarmy.oppyo.com/video/embed/p77tegr7ln

AI Agents Army Top Benefits:

<<<>>> Get Ai Agents Army Now! <<<>>>
Ai Agents Army Best Features:
  1. Content Creation: Craft blog posts, social media updates, email sequences, and more effortlessly.
  2. Task Automation: Automate email sequences, sales funnels, social media posting, and graphic asset generation.
  3. Lead Generation and Sales: Create optimized lead magnets, landing pages, email copies, and sales letters effortlessly.
  4. Pricing and Offers: Choose from various pricing tiers offering additional features and capabilities.
Who Ai Agents Army for ?
Ai Agents Army caters to a diverse user base, including:
Bloggers:
Ai Agents Army can assist bloggers in various ways, such as generating SEO-optimized blog post ideas, creating engaging content, and automating social media sharing. By utilizing AI-powered tools, bloggers can streamline their content creation process, attract more readers, and enhance their blogā€™s visibility in search engine results.
Affiliate Marketers:
For affiliate marketers, Ai Agents Army offers valuable support in keyword research, content creation, and lead generation. By leveraging AI algorithms, affiliate marketers can identify profitable niches, produce compelling content to promote affiliate products, and automate email marketing campaigns to drive conversions and commissions.
Agencies:
Agencies can benefit from Ai Agents Army by enhancing their service offerings and improving operational efficiency. With AI-powered tools for content creation, lead generation, and client reporting, agencies can deliver high-quality marketing campaigns to their clients more effectively, scale their operations, and achieve better results in less time.
E-commerce Sellers:
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submitted by raouftgod to u/raouftgod [link] [comments]


2024.04.22 09:31 -lemmy My personal thoughts after a month(long review)

Steam wouldn't allow me to post a massive wall of text for my review(understandably so) and I just wanted to share my complete thoughts here.
This is my most anticipated game this year after playing DD:DA for hundreds of hours which cemented the new series as one of my favorites. Here is my review after completing the main story and 1 month after the release of Dragon's Dogma 2
Initially I was planning on separating the pros and cons of this game but the two are so intertwined within the game that I decided to drop the idea and I will just talk about the impact the topic has for the game. Most impactful will be first and least would go last.
WORLD DESIGN
THE JOURNEY IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN THE DESTINATION. This is the biggest improvement the game has from its predecessor. The map is 4x larger than the previous but was less tedious to traverse. 90% of the game will be you out in the world fighting mobs and discovering new locations and paths that will lead you to your destination. The world is beautifully crafted with so much sceneries that I gotta whip out photomode to take pics. Shit sometimes I just wanna walk around the forest without monsters there out to molest me lmao. This world feels like when I first entered Skyrim, only this time you get to tag along with 3 homies, one of which is your ride or die(I will talk about pawns next). This really makes you feel like you're in a traditional adventuring party like Aragorn in Lord of the Rings and all the fantasy stories it has inspired since.
The world is LARGELY UNSCRIPTED and it makes for the best experiences you can get. You get alot of random ambushes and some fight's difficulty will be determined by terrain - harpies and most fights for that matter, are deadlier near cliffs as they can yeet you, but you can yeet them as well :) When it rains, you and enemies are more susceptible to being frozen and lightning deals more damage. When it's night it would be a harder fight as you can't see shit. When you like flashy sorcerer skills, you will do more damage but.. you can't see shit. I ain't complaining though as it adds to the realism of combat. YOU CAN FLY ACROSS THE MAP ON A GRIFFIN'S BACK IN A COMPLETELY UNSCRIPTED MANNER.
I understood why the team chose to limit fast travel as fast traveling will make this game a lot more boring. With limited fast travel, now you gotta decide if you MUST use that rare ferrystone that is in short supply, and truth be told I only used those when I was way too low in HP and it's night time with no checkpoints or if there is something I gotta do IRL like go to work. There are also oxcarts that transport you from major towns and again, you can get ambushed. In the later areas there would be rope carriage systems that can transport you faster but still not without danger as harpies attack you and the occasional Griffin will dive bomb you which can wipe out your entire party so check the skies before using them.
There are also campsites that will restore you and you're companions' HP bar but you risk getting ambushed by monsters. One of my most memorable moments was getting ambushed by 4 different groups of monsters while camping so it makes for a great experience. Camping is also useful since you can't see shit during night and risk facing the biggest threat this game has to offer - falling off a cliff(we got alot to discuss about the game's difficulty).
Now let's talk about the towns and settlements. The design for them is breathtaking, especially the main castle in Vermund. I am somewhat of a medieval nerd so stuff like this is major for me. I will say the settlements are all great except the Elven one which looks to be too small and less fleshed out. Aside from services though thereā€™s not much to do in towns as the RPG part of this game is in the bare minimum to my dismay.
About the destination. Most of the ruins and caves we go to really have underwhelming loot. Most of the good armors and weapons can be purchased from vendors and only in end-game can you get stronger equipment but only with a negligible amount of stats. So unless your a fashion's dogma enjoyer or just like collecting every piece in game, loot is pretty underwhelming. It wouldn't hut to make the destinations as rewarding as the journey you know? I don't understand what they were thinking regarding this issue.
There is absolutely one rewarding journey - THE SPHINX. The Sphinx is an NPC/Boss that is hidden away in a secluded area of the map. Looking for her was a highlight journey for me and is one of the rare occasions where the destination is as good as the journey. They really cooked with how well the Sphinx riddles were. If only the entire game was as well done as the Sphinx. Itsuno straight out lied when he said there were more interactions like this outside the main story and if there were, none of them are as memorable as the Sphinx.
All in all, traversing this game's world was the main experience this game has to offer. If you're the type of player who likes slower games where you go on adventures who value the experience more than the resolution, this is a great game for you.
PAWN AKA YOUR AI COMPANIONS
I LOVE MY PAWN SO MUCH RAAHHHH. If there is something unique this game has from other RPGs it's the pawn system. Aside from your main, you get to create another custom character who will accompany you throughout your journey. Over time your pawn will get better and will learn new stuff in dealing with enemies. Aside from that your pawn will get to know you and comment about it. My pawn tells me that I am an adaptable sort - carefully planning each action and throwing it all away the next moment.
You can hire 2 other pawns from other players and your pawn can be hired by others as well. Your pawn will return with a report sheet about what they learned from their journey along with gifts and ratings they received from other players. They can learn new stuff such as quests, treasure chests, caves, etc. and they will tell you about it and can lead you to the destination. They kinda work like a quest marker eliminating the need for such. Pawns also talk. Alot. Sometimes it gets annoying but I don't mind personally. They would oftentimes talk about their experiences and about what they know like the first game but now they also interact with one another really adding to the team's dynamic as they would talk about what to do in combat and react around the surroundings. I also have favorite hired pawns who act like my pawn's BFFs and they would chit-chat about mundane things. Hired pawns will also remember you and would comment depending on their experiences traveling with you.
It's impressive how much this game makes you attached to your main pawn given that it's a custom character but I guess it is inline with how much this game greatly utilizes unscripted events to personalize your adventure. I for one treat my pawn with utmost care as she has been my number one supporter in this journey. There is also an easter egg that the game throws at you if you treat your pawns well and it was worth it imo.
Pawn combat can be a hit or miss depending on how well a pawn is optimized. I've read that pawns will also comment on their preferred vocations, mine for example talks about how far she's come from being a mage to a sorceress. I'm proud of her when she summons a meteor dealing a larger chunk of damage to bosses than me. But she also enters derp mode sometimes like dying to a slime which should be her specialty as slimes are weak to magick. Some pawns fall off cliffs alot lmao. It just adds to the quirkiness of the experience.
COMBAT
MASTERWORK. They really emphasize the A in ARPG. The combat is largely similar to the first game 12 years ago and no other game to my knowledge has IT. The climbing mechanic to reach weak points of large monsters still slaps. The sorcerer is still a walking calamity that summons tornadoes and meteors. What they greatly improved upon is the realism of combat physics. You feel the weight of a big fucking sword swinging, each swing has momentum and you can be opened up to counters if you swing blindly, huge tornadoes will sweep enemies in a whirlwind and the trees and grass will sway in that direction(yes wind will be dictated by your tornado), the ground shakes with each meteor hit and you don't know wtf is happening as you can't see shit from the debris. Overall the combat feels more realistic thanks to the RE engine compared to the 1st game which was more arcade-y.
Enemies will also act with their own strategies. For example, goblins always have a tank, a weakling, and a leader who calls for reinforcements. Mercenaries will cal for reinforcements when you're high leveled. Wolves hunt in packs and will drag you and munch on you away from your pawns. Lizard people stick on walls! Ogres are attracted to women! Griffins will fly away when injured and will return to you for another round, most of the time when you're busy dealing with another boss.
The game has 9 distinct vocations and they all play differently which makes for a varied experience. I for one prefer the fighter vocation as it feels the most balanced and as gamer tradition, the you will be a male sword and shield user in a fantasy world. You can switch vocs anytime to your preference. Warrior is my 2nd fave and it plays differently than fighter focusing more on big damage, big knockdowns and a huge emphasis on the rhythm of your moves. The fight's outcome would mostly be determined if you can keep the pace of your large blows against the enemy. Archers need to prepare their special arrows to deal explosive damage. Sorcerers are walking calamities and no other game to my knowledge has a magick system as fun as Dogma. We do need some balancing though since some vocs are literally invincible.
Aside from the random encounters I have listed above, the most engaging moments I had in this game was leveling up to 30 and killing my 1st drake at around mid-30s. Each time you go out of town, you gotta be prepared for the journey. After that period however, the game will be too easy if you try any optimization. I for one didn't upgrade my gear until post-game and went on adventures underprepared with a lackluster party that didn't have meaningful ranged attacks lmao. Made the game more fun but we shouldn't have to sacrifice the joy of strategizing just to make the game better. I mean, I also like equipping the best gear to address bigger challenges but what's the point of upgrades if challenges remain the same? That for me is the main drawback of this game - the DIFFICULTY CURVE DECLINES. It wouldn't hurt to add stronger new enemies? Maybe they could've given less overall exp so we wouldn't be overleveled at midgame? Currently I addressed this issue by adding custom difficulty mods as well as capping my exp but that should be the dev's job. Any praise for that would have to go to the community who work hard to address these issues. Even a simple HARD MODE would work wonders to increase replayability.
RPG ELEMENTS
THIS COULD HAVE BEEN GAME OF THE YEAR. This could have been one of the front running RPGs for the years to come if only Capcom added more time and effort addressing this. They really added the bare minimum in the RPG of ARPG. For how much immersive the unscripted open world is, the opposite can be said about the scripted story. Firstly the story was fine from the beginning. We were establishing what needs to be done, who's who and that's great and all. Then we were sent to the next major town and seemingly that whole plot point was held to a stop and further on I realized that they just dropped that part of the story. I'm not asking for anything groundbreaking here Capcom, I just want to have a cohesive story with a start and a resolution. Aside from the "human" side of the story, the dragon was a let down compared to the first.
A positive I can say about this story is the ending which largely revolves around the "cosmic" side of the story and involves your main pawn who unlike most NPCs, you actually have a meaningful connection with. I loved the game's theme of great will overcoming the challenge. Also THE ENDING MADE ME EMOTIONAL. The ending theme also slaps like a 90s Disney classic. "But I thought you said story bad?" The human side of the story doesn't matter much but I'm still salty they couldn't give us a complete experience. With all this said, the game lets you have another journey and you can recreate yourself and your pawn, but after that ending, there is no chance that I will recreate my pawn. NO.
A big advantage that this game has over other RPGs is the CHARACTER CUSTOMIZATION. Itsuno said that he wanted this game to feel like an Isekai and he was spot on. This is the only game where I have successfully recreated myself in it and I made my main pawn my favorite Kpop idol - Jennie. There are alot of generic creations from other series such as Kratos but we also have Ice Spice, Kanye and so many other characters who look just like their inspos. Really made alot of memorable party members.
Now I don't know why NPCs take up a huge chunk of CPU since in my experience, they're all pretty basic. You got alot of townsfolk NPCs that are only there as extras. The main NPCs aren't that engaging as well as they have limited screentimes and some of their motives don't make much sense. The first game actually had a more memorable cast(eventhough 'tis a low bar lmao) with all of the meme-worthy one liners they had.
This game does not have a stealth mode so what the hell were they thinking when they added idk, at least three stealth missions? One "stealth" mission would have been enough tbh. You can dress up to sneak around forbidden places but even if you don't, the guards don't even bother that much. It's really immersion breaking when you just walk in a forbidden section and the guards do nothing and if they do something, they just forget about it in a couple minutes. Going to jail also has little to no repercussions as you just get out the next day and nobody even comments about it. I would love a bit more of QA in this department.
Speaking of repercussions, your actions don't have much apart from quest choices. The autosaves and checkpoint saves work by enhancing the experience you have with this game as it weighs down on the choices that you make. You can fail quests if you didn't read much of the dialogue and quest details or if too much time has passed. Some players like it, some don't, and I personally am for such mechanics. However, that cannot be said about the actions you do outside of quests, You can romance the evil queen and the game wouldn't address it. YOU CAN KILL ANYONE AND IT WOULDN'T MATTER as the game just automatically revives them. They should have sticked to their guns since it's also a game mechanic that you can revive NPCs if you want to. There's also a fortune teller who tells you what to do in the quests that you have. I wish they went in deeper with the whole you can romance and kill anyone. You can but it doesn't really affect much. This is really a low point of the game.
Romance in this game is ehhh. You get only two romance quests and they're both women - I want justice for those who prefer men. The story also heavily assumes that you are a straight male. The beloved system is just as bad as the first game as the dragon will just pick up whoever you spoke last with high affinity(This game's story is heavily inspired by tales of old where the hero rescues the princess from the dragon). Escort quests immediately makes NPCs fall inlove with you and the reward you get is pretty negligible.I wished they reworked this as I was avoiding escort quests all together since I didn't want to romance most of these NPCs and affinity is too easy to max in general. And the one I wanted to romance disappeared early in the game for God knows why. But it doesn't really matter as there are no meaningful interactions with your beloved anyway.
To sum it up, RPG elements are the 2nd major drawback this game has. Word is, Capcom had to release a game for the 1st quarter so it's possible that this is the part were they had to make cuts as it shows with the story and RPG mechanics.
SIMPLIFICATION
LESS OPTIONS = LESS VARIETY. I hated most of their decisions regarding the simplification of this game compared to the first.
Let's start off on a positive note - lesser skills for vocations meant that we needed to select what skills we really wanted for our party. Back in the first game, you had access to more skills which meant less consequences in choosing as you can pretty much have every tool you need in your arsenal. This is the only positive so far that I have.
Pawns are greatly improved. But at the cost of these improvements are simplifications in how the pawn system works. We got more options back in DD:DA but some of them weren't that good. In DD2 we have less option that are better but at the cost of pawn personalization. Pawn personality is also tied with pawn combat behavior which was not the case in the previous game. So if you like a kindhearted pawn's dialogue(and voice for that matter), you have no choice but to also have a kindhearted pawn's combat mechanics. The pawn's bestiary which dictates how much knowledge they have against certain enemies is also simplified, now you only need to kill a set number of enemies. Before you also had to perform certain actions to gain enemy knowledge. To me pawn inclination optimization is a step forward with a step back.
The first game had a ton more of armor slots which also include a base clothing layer. This time we have less armor slots and no clothing layer whatsoever. This makes almost every pawn you will see have the same outfit. And of course this outfit had to be a revealing corset making the world look like a red light district. I also hate that armors are locked via vocation since the all mesh together so well anyways. Atleast the game is easy enough in late game that you can just pick what armor looks cool I guess?
OTHER CONCERNS
I still got alot of things I would like to talk about. If there is one bias I have towards this game, it's the whole VIBE this game has. The entire look, philosophy, premise, all of it feels like it was tailor-made for me. The art direction is simply insane. They really took their time studying medieval European art and it reflects in the world design. The armors are a sick blend of realism and fantasy. The creature designs are generic AF but is done with the utmost detail that other games lack. The language is a well blended English and Old English that no other game does. I've actually downloaded the official design work of the 1st game and if Capcom wants to sell another design book, they can take my wallet.
"Conviction is the human will that reaches its greatest power." says the game's opening. The philosophy of this game revolves around the STRENGTH OF WILL. The will of the Arisen that is tested if there is enough strength to break free of the cycle of eternal return. The will of the Pawn - who began with no will of one's own, grows into a being of one's own free will as they journey with the Arisen. In the journey to regain the Kingdom, slay the dragon, or something else entirely hidden behind the cycle of this world, the Arisen is simply compelled none but by their own conviction. This reminds me alot of the works of Nietzsche particularly the Will to Power and the concept of the Ubermench.
The premise of this game on surface is just about the chosen one that will embark on a journey to slay the dragon. Very simple but THAT'S ALL I WANT. So I have no idea why there are so few story driven RPGs who do this as generically as Dragon's Dogma. It's a Goddamn shame Capcom for the life of them, cannot deliver a decent story with such a simple premise. I can only pray that the success of this game greenlights DD3 and that Capcom actually sees the potential of this series that has all the foundations built in but is just missing that additional love and support in order to deliver a standard RPG experience.
For such a great game, most of its shortcomings feel like it's caused by Capcom's decision to release it in the 1st quarter of the year with possible cut content. In its current state, the game still has problems with optimization as well as limited content considering it's 70$. This is a big issue of corporate greed as an additional DLC can easily fix most of the game's issues like how Dark Arisen DLC improved DD1. It is still a 100+ hour experience don't get me wrong but a couple of tweaks can easily double that life span. I would understand if players would prefer to purchase this game at a latter date when it is a full experience - complete with all the patches and DLCs. I however, still enjoy my time playing DD2 and have no regrets with the price, to each their own.
If you're still here, dear reader, I applaud you and I hope you enjoyed the ramblings of an upjumped zealot who loved Dragon's Dogma too much. I am still planning on getting all the achievements for this game but as you can imagine, I couldn't wait to talk about this game as there is so much I would like to discuss. I donā€™t wanna rush getting the achievements as that would greatly diminish my enjoyment with the game - ITā€™S BEST PLAYED SLOW. I am also waiting for hopefully more updates from Capcom, and if they will release a DLC.
submitted by -lemmy to DragonsDogma [link] [comments]


2024.04.20 10:01 Red-its Dark Catcher mt5 EA (Download link inside)

Forex trading is a lucrative but competitive market where traders are constantly seeking an edge to maximize their profits. In recent years, the use of automated trading systems, also known as Expert Advisors (EAs), has become increasingly popular among Forex traders. One such EA that has been gaining attention in the trading community is Dark Catcher MT5 EA. This powerful tool is designed to help traders identify profitable trading opportunities and execute trades automatically, making it a valuable asset for both beginner and experienced traders. Dark Catcher MT5 EA is an advanced Expert Advisor that is compatible with the MetaTrader 5 platform. It uses a sophisticated algorithm to analyze market trends and patterns, allowing traders to make informed decisions based on real-time data. The EA is designed to monitor multiple currency pairs simultaneously and execute trades with precision and speed. One of the key features of Dark Catcher MT5 EA is its ability to adapt to changing market conditions. The EA can adjust its trading parameters based on volatility, trend strength, and other factors, ensuring that traders stay ahead of the curve and capitalize on profitable opportunities. Dark Catcher MT5 EA operates by scanning the Forex market for potential trade setups based on predefined criteria. Once a trading signal is identified, the EA will automatically execute the trade on behalf of the trader, eliminating the need for manual intervention. Traders can customize the EAā€™s settings to suit their trading style and risk tolerance, allowing for greater flexibility and control over their trading activities. The EA utilizes advanced risk management techniques to protect tradersā€™ capital and minimize losses. It incorporates stop-loss and take-profit orders to ensure that trades are closed at optimal levels, preventing large drawdowns and preserving profits. Additionally, Dark Catcher MT5 EA can be set to trade during specific hours or days, allowing traders to tailor their trading schedule to their preferences.
  1. Automated trading: The EA eliminates the need for manual trading, allowing traders to save time and reduce emotional stress.
  2. Technical analysis: Dark Catcher MT5 EA uses advanced technical analysis tools to identify high-probability trading opportunities.
  3. Risk management: The EA incorporates strict risk management rules to safeguard tradersā€™ capital and ensure long-term profitability.
  4. Profit potential: By leveraging the EAā€™s ability to trade multiple currency pairs simultaneously, traders can maximize their profit potential and diversify their trading portfolio.
  5. User-friendly interface: Dark Catcher MT5 EA features a user-friendly interface that is easy to navigate and customize, making it suitable for traders of all skill levels.
ā€œDark Catcherā€ is a reliable advisor that helps you navigate the financial market and identify prospects for successful trading. By using a Bollinger Bands channel, CCI indicator, and various filters to search for a signal, ā€œDark Catcherā€ can help you penetrate the darkest corners of the market and find opportunities for financial gain. One important filter used by ā€œDark Catcherā€ is MDR (maximum daily market volatility). If the MDR value exceeds the price, then opening a transaction is allowed only in the direction of the price movement. If the MDR value does not exceed the specified values, then it is allowed to open transactions against the price movement. In combination with the MDR filter, the max_candle filter (candle filter) is also used. This allows for the effective filtering out of bad signals, leaving only the best ones. Exit from the trade occurs through the reverse Bollinger channel, which is ideal for night trading. Profit will always be different since the BB channel depends on the price movement at certain moments. The search for a signal begins an hour after the opening of a new day and lasts three hours. Trading occurs only with a fixed lot, single transactions, with a hard stop loss for each transaction, which is individual for each currency pair. ā€œDark Catcherā€ does not use averaging methods, martingale, or the like. The recovery function is used after a loss, and the break-even level is implemented if the price moves in a flat. The advisor was optimized from January 1, 2023. It is recommended to test the advisor from this date forward, as the market changes quickly. ā€œDark Catcherā€ is updated once a year to remain profitable and adapt to the changing market. The profit for each currency pair over just over a year is not that great. However, when adding all currency pairs together and calculating the total profit, a profit of +2800% can be obtained in 1 year and 4 months. During testing, no transactions were removed or manipulated. The advisor has been developed and tested extensively with ideal settings and a maximum winning rate. The test was conducted with a lot size of 0.1 and a deposit of $1000. Pay attention to the value of ā€œprofitability, drawdown, and percentage of won trades.ā€
Conclusion Dark Catcher MT5 EA is a powerful tool that can help Forex traders unlock their full potential and achieve consistent profits in the market. By leveraging the EAā€™s advanced features and risk management capabilities, traders can streamline their trading activities and focus on growing their accounts without the hassle of manual trading. Whether you are a beginner or an experienced trader, Dark Catcher MT5 EA can serve as your secret weapon in the competitive world of Forex trading. FAQs 1. Is Dark Catcher MT5 EA suitable for beginner traders? Yes, Dark Catcher MT5 EA is designed to be user-friendly and customizable, making it suitable for traders of all skill levels. Beginners can leverage the EAā€™s automated trading capabilities to start trading confidently without the need for extensive market experience. 2. Can I use Dark Catcher MT5 EA on multiple currency pairs? Yes, Dark Catcher MT5 EA is capable of monitoring and trading multiple currency pairs simultaneously. This feature allows traders to diversify their trading portfolio and maximize their profit potential across different markets. 3. How does Dark Catcher MT5 EA protect against losses? Dark Catcher MT5 EA incorporates strict risk management rules, including stop-loss and take-profit orders, to protect tradersā€™ capital and minimize losses. The EA is designed to close trades at optimal levels to prevent large drawdowns and preserve profits over the long term. 4. Can I customize the settings of Dark Catcher MT5 EA? Yes, traders can customize the settings of Dark Catcher MT5 EA to suit their trading style and preferences. The EA features a user-friendly interface that allows for easy navigation and customization, giving traders greater control over their trading activities. 5. How do I get started with Dark Catcher MT5 EA? To get started with Dark Catcher MT5 EA, simply download the EA from a reputable source and install it on your MetaTrader 5 platform. Once installed, you can customize the EAā€™s settings and start trading confidently with automated precision and efficiency.
https://www.forexinworld.com/dark-catcher-mt5/
submitted by Red-its to forextweet [link] [comments]


2024.04.17 13:00 DeLaRoka Unalengua IPA translator as custom phonetic data source in Definer

Unalengua IPA translator as custom phonetic data source in Definer
Diving into a new language is exciting, but let's be honest, getting the pronunciation right can be a real challenge. If you've ever tried learning another language, you're probably nodding your head in agreement. And for those who've come across the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), you know it's a tool that's supposed to help. The IPA turns the sounds of speech into symbols, making it easier to figure out how to say words correctly. However, understanding IPA and using it to improve your pronunciation is another hurdle to jump over.
But, getting to grips with this alphabet and then turning text into IPA symbols can feel like solving a complex puzzle. That's where tools that convert text to IPA come in handy. They're designed to make the whole process a lot smoother.
Unalengua.com is one such tool. It's a platform that can convert text from English, Spanish, Portuguese, German, Italian, Polish, and Esperanto into the IPA, and also provides Text-to-Speech audio playback and automatic language detection.
While this tool is undeniably useful, repeatedly copying text, switching to a new tab with Unalengua, and pasting the text can quickly become cumbersome.
Fortunately, you can seamlessly integrate this website into your reading workflow, removing the need to toggle between tabs or lose your place in the text. This is achievable through a pop-up search utility known as Definer.
Definer enables you to set up a custom data source by simply inputting the URL of your favorite online dictionary or translator, like Unalengua's IPA translator, within its settings. With this setup, anytime you come across a challenging word, phrase, or even an entire paragraph (up to 2000 symbols), you can highlight it, and Definer will promptly display the IPA translation and pronunciation right on the page you're viewing.
Let's walk through the configuration process together. You'll be surprised how easy this actually is.
https://preview.redd.it/1t4evrsfr0vc1.png?width=621&format=png&auto=webp&s=b884234c323b308c256f6c80f81f61b24667e883

Getting started

Start off by installing the Definer - Popup Dictionary & Translator extension on your browser. It's a tool for quickly accessing definitions, translations, and various online resources directly from any webpage.
Download:

1. Locate the Custom source

Right-click on the extension's icon and select "Definer Options". Then, navigate to the "Sources" tab from the left-hand menu. Locate the "Custom" source in the list, and click on "Settings" to open its configuration.
https://preview.redd.it/jy7wdaj626kc1.png?width=2668&format=png&auto=webp&s=6a6b3152707f33ea96c1321c3bdbcdcfac2f174f

2. Set the website address (URL)

Now, let's input the URL of the page where the results are displayed on unalengua.com. Enter the following line into the "URL" input in the settings:
https://unalengua.com/ipa-translate?hl={lang}&ttsLocale={lang}&voiceId=Salli&text={str} 
I got this URL by navigating to the unalengua.com, making a quick translation, then copying the URL of the page with the translation result. Then I swapped the specific search term with the {str} variable and the language code with the {lang} to enable dynamic searches in Definer.
The URL field supports a few variables. For this case, we only need the {str} and {lang} variables.

3. Set custom styles (CSS)

CSS, short for Cascading Style Sheets, is what defines the presentation of webpages. We're going to slightly adjust how Unalengua.com appears within Definer's interface. The code snippet below will hide a couple of elements we don't really need in the results and match the color palette with Definer's theme.
Note that this customization will only apply within Definer's results window, leaving original appearance of unalengua.com on the web untouched.
Enter the following CSS code into the designated "CSS" field:
header, .v-footer > button:first-child, .bb-separator { display: none !important; } div.v-application .elevation-4 { box-shadow: none !important } .v-main, .inverse, #ipaContainer { padding: 0 0 0 0 !important; } .v-dialog__container + div { padding: 0 !important; } .v-sheet, .v-navigation-drawer__content, .v-application, .v-dialog { color: var(--v-text-base) !important; background-color: var(--v-ground-base) !important; } .v-application * { color: var(--v-text-base) !important; } .mark > span, span.mark, .v-tooltip__content { background: var(--v-primary-base) !important; color: var(--v-contrast-base) !important; } .v-application .nested-mark { background: rgba(var(--accent-rgb), 0.3) !important; color: var(--v-contrast-base) !important; } a { color: var(--v-anchor-base) !important; } .spinner { margin-left: 15px !important; } .v-application.mobile .share-btn { bottom: -15px !important; } 
https://preview.redd.it/5iyqsppv26kc1.png?width=1500&format=png&auto=webp&s=64fb7fbb23c029d2ba6168577dd140eeb6a2f3a6

Success!

The setup is all done. With this dynamic duo, you're not just reading text; you're immersing yourself in the sounds of a new language, right from the comfort of your current webpage. Let's jump right in and see how it actually performs:

Looking up an IPA transcription on Unalengua through Definer popup dictionary browser extension

Example of getting IPA by typing the text, instead of selecting it on a page

English to IPA translation. British accent. Sentence mode. Speed 0.75x. Green theme.

Spanish to IPA translation. Dark theme.

Esperanto to IPA translation. Royal Blue theme.

Russian to IPA translation. Dark theme.

Chrome Web Store Firefox Addons

submitted by DeLaRoka to lumetrium_definer [link] [comments]


2024.04.15 23:15 TheMynx My experience switching from Windows to Manjaro

Heya linux_gaming!
Apologies in advance, this is gonna be a fairly long read.
To preface this post, I am not here just to say "Windows bad, linux FTW", or the other way around, it's simply my experience going from Windows to Manjaro, what I expected to be easy/difficult, and how everything is going now. Also, I'm no Linux guru: some issues I had might be an easy to fix for you, so please keep that in mind while reading. I did my best to search up solutions to them, I was able to fix some of them, others not quite, although I would be really thankful if anyone could provide some help to solve the remaining nitpicks I have with Linux!
With that out of the way, I've thought about switching to a Linux distro as my main operating system for a while now. I've tried it several times over the years but there used to be lots of shortcomings that were sufficient enough of a dealbreaker to me that I ended up going back to Windows every time, be it not being able to open certain file types, having to use the terminal pretty much any time I wanted to do anything, difficulty downloading and installing some software, somehow breaking my install accidentally, or there being straight up no alternatives that matched my demands and wouldn't be a large compromise over using their non-free Windows counterparts.
Now I don't define myself as a power user, the typical usage for my desktop tends to be 60-65% browsing, watching videos, reading documentation and programming, with the remaining time spent playing games. For the former, almost all of my needs could easily be met by Linux previously, and in some cases it was a better experience. However, the latter was, for the most part, impossible, aside from native implementations of games. I also do like messing with my hardware a bit to get the most performance as I can out of it. More on this later in the post.
Fast forward a couple years, I hear gaming on Linux is much better thanks to Proton, and it seems a lot more of the applications I use daily either are available on a web browser, or in a lot of cases, natively available on Linux! All this while Windows seems to be getting more bloated with each update and me fighting against all the new garbage I do not care to use or want running on my computer, I decided heck, why not give Linux another try.
So I started looking into available distros, and came up with the following list of candidates:
- Ubuntu : honestly on the list solely because of how widely used it is, I figured it would be easiest to troubleshoot any issue I'd had. I don't like the Ubuntu UI, and my experience with the software manager has been.. not so great in the past. I don't doubt that it's an amazing distro, otherwise it likely wouldn't be so popular, but the only "selling point" for me in this case would be the large user base.
- Fedora : ran this one as my daily driver on my laptop for a while at uni since I needed easy access to GCC, and the distro REALLY grew on me. I still use Fedora on my laptop. I had a flawless experience with this distro from start to finish, minus some tinkering to install some apps. Great looking UI, stable, easy install, and everything just.. worked. None of the problems I had with Linux previously were here. Sure, I had to go through the terminal every once in a while, but no copy-pasting commands I didn't understand at all from random forums praying they fixed this random issue I was having, I was flabbergasted to say the least.
- Manjaro : no surprise due to the title, this is the distro I've picked. The main reasons are because of the Arch wiki, the AUR, an active forum, and Manjaro's reputation for being a fairly stable distro. I used to run GNOME on both Fedora and Ubuntu, however after looking at all the customization options available in KDE, I decided I could get a feel similar enough to GNOME all the while having access to VRR, which as far as I know is not a feature on GNOME. Given I use my desktop far more for gaming, this really was what made me pick Manjaro over Fedora.

Manjaro it is then! I definitely didn't go into this expecting the grass to be greener on the other side, but I did know more or less what I was getting myself into, what I would gain and lose by swapping to Linux.
Here are all the things I anticipated would go well, and what I thought I'd have trouble getting to work:
+ Straightforward installation
+ Ease of installing apps. This was the biggest selling point of Linux to me, while installing apps on Windows isn't necessarily hard, why do I have to go to a billion different websites and run a billion different installers? The Microsoft Store should be the solution to this, except it's probably the worst official app store I've ever seen. Package managers in Linux seem like a far better solution.
+ Customizability of KDE. I love tinkering with the appearance of any UI when given the option to, and after searching some examples of what can be done, I was genuinely excited to get the desktop environment to really feel like it's built the way I want it to look.
+ Ease of installing software updates and not having to reinstall my OS every 6 months to a year to avoid my C drive randomly going from around 800GB free to somehow 700GB free. I don't know how or why it happens, since I install everything on my secondary 2TB drive, and yet my C drive eventually gets bloated by.. something.
+ Undervolting my RX 6800 GPU, I heard AMD drivers were pretty good on Linux!
- Undervolting my CPU. This is mostly because I am using a 13600KF on a B760 board, and I relied on an older microcode + Throttlestop on the Windows side to get my undervolt working, so no doing it through the BIOS like on a Z690/Z790 chipset.
- Some games simply not working. For example, League of Legends and Dragon Ball FighterZ I fully expected to not be able to play before even getting into Linux. Not without more tinkering and compromises than I can be bothered to do for those titles.
- Despite the far better software support, I knew some apps don't have a native alternative on Linux. An example for this is Notion, although it does have a web app.
- Having to get accustomed to the terminal.

I'm sure I could come up with at least a dozen other pros and cons, but then this post wouldn't be about my experience anymore.

With that in mind, I decided to get going and install Manjaro. Everything was a breeze! It really didn't take much thinking on my end and within a couple minutes, I was set up and ready to start using my computer. I started installing everything I normally use on my desktop: Brave, Discord, Steam, Spotify, IntelliJ, VSCode and my password manager. All through the package manager GUI, it was really easy and reminded me a lot of the way Ninite works, really painless, nothing to do on my end, and all was set up and working immediately, except this is the case for 95% of what I need to install on Manjaro.
With all the basic stuff out of the way, I started customizing KDE's look, and ended up with this UI. Loads more can be done with the customization options in KDE, but ultimately I really enjoyed Fedora's aesthetic with a dock and a top bar with no desktop icons, so it's what I tried to copy here. Getting dark mode and nice icons was also stupid easy, there are loads of easily accessible presets that can be downloaded within the appearance settings for the desktop evironment. Absolutely amazing. I really encourage anyone to look up what others have done with their Plasma install, between the downloadable widgets, icons, cursors, themes, and all the baked-in customization options, you can really make everything feel like it's yours.
Games! So many of them just work! Like, so many! Although I ran into a few issues with Steam, mostly caused by myself, for a lot of them it really is just a matter of clicking "Play" and, well, playing. If there's any performance loss, it must be so marginal that I can't notice it. In all of my use cases, performance was essentially as good as on Windows. For games that aren't on Steam, it's very likely that you can get them working through Lutris, in my case, Diablo IV on Battle.net. It's amazing how far gaming on Linux has come recently, and it's, barring some specific titles, genuinely a really good experience.
As far as the terminal is concerned, I did have to use it, but FAR less than I anticipated. This was mostly for some CLI tools, and it overall didn't bother me at all, whereas previously I felt like if I wanted to get anything basic done, it pretty much required me to go through the terminal. This is a massive ease-of-use improvement in my eyes, at the end of the day I don't want to spend most of my time using the terminal, and the more I can limit its usage, the better.
And to top it all off, undervolting my CPU was quite easy: there's a page on the Arch wiki explaining how to use intel-undervolt, and I had everything functioning the same as in Windows within 10 minutes, or at least what felt like 10 minutes. This is really important to me given that 13th gen CPUs are TOASTY without an undervolt. This brings down my temperatures under load from 95C+ to high 50s/low 60s, while reducing power draw by about 65W for identical performance.

Now, I wanna get into the parts that took a bit more tinkering to figure out, or that I haven't yet been able to solve, although those are minor issues.

On Windows, I had custom fan profiles for my AIO, intake fans and exhaust fans using FanCotrol on the Windows side. Easy enough I figured, there's an app called CoolerControl that does essentially the same thing on Linux! Well, it seems Gigabyte motherboards require installing the it87-dkms-git module from AUR, enabling a parameter in the grub configuration file, and telling modprobe to load the it87 module. Without this, sensors-detect couldn't find any of my fan headers. Granted, now that I know how to solve this problem, it really only would take me a couple of minutes to fix and to have CoolerControl detect all my fan headers. But, figuring out that the issue was specific to Gigabyte motherboards took a lot of searching before landing upon a topic with someone that had this same exact issue with a similar motherboard.
Next, I expected undervolting my GPU to be about as easy as undervolting through AMD's Adrenaline software, lowering some sliders, applying and calling it a day. Though as it turns out, there's no GUI that easily allows for this. There is Corectrl, but applying any form of undervolt immediately caused my system to hang, and all of the CLI tools I could find had way more granularity than I was comfortable working with. I know I was able to undervolt from the stock 1025mV to 930mV without any crashes under load through AMD's GUI, but I gave up on Linux. Diving through Corectrl's GitLab issues did give me some pointers as to what was causing the hang, but ultimately I decided it was too much work to put in. This is an issue I might come back to later, but as of right now I'm honestly a bit overwhelmed by it. For now, I just applied a slightly more aggressive fan curve at high loads using CoolerControl.
As far as issues with games are concerned, I have a lot on my secondary drive that I don't feel like reinstalling in order to format that drive to an EXT4 partition. So of course, with me being stubborn, this took some time to set up properly, although Valve does have a GitHub page dedicated to using an NTFS drive as your Steam library on Linux. After following that guide, I simply couldn't start any of my games, they'd say they're launching and immediately close. Turns out that was an issue with Steam's compatdata folder, which was solved after deleting it. Then, after a while, Proton would simply not work until I validated its integrity, which would download some supposedly missing files. That was fixed by reinstalling Steam. I don't know why this happened to be completely honest, though it's likely an issue caused by my secondary drive's NTFS partition, and it's very much due to my stubborness rather than an issue with Linux or Steam. Although, some games don't work well, or at all, usually ones that require an anti-cheat of some sort. If you play those, unfortunately there's really no solution for those AFAIK on Linux. Some may work, others may not. This is the case for me with Dragon Ball FighterZ.
Finally, this is an issue I have yet to find any solution to. I know some peripherals don't play well with Linux, but one that really bothers me is my Corsair HS80 volume not matching the one shown on my volume slider. Every time I start up my computer, if my volume was set to 75% on my last session, it would display the volume at 75%, except it's in reality around 25% is my guess. I have to use my volume rocker to lower the volume to 0%, which plays an audio cue early on, around 50%, to indicate sound is off long before the user interface displays it at 0%. Then, increasing or decreasing volume is accurate for the rest of the session. No clue what causes this, or how to fix it.

So if I had to sum my experience up in one word, it'd be great. There's issues, of course, just as Windows has its very large share of issues. As I said, I didn't come in expecting the grass to be greener on the other side, but Manjaro fulfills my needs much better than Windows does, and is a really enjoyable experience through and through. If you want to make the swap to Linux yourself, I can only encourage you to do it, so long as you know what you're sacrificing and what you're gaining. In my case, it was ease of installation and of use, better UI, easier installation process for software, and a highly customizable desktop environment, while really only sacrificing my GPU's undervolt, and having a minor issue with the volume slider. I will continue to use Manjaro as my daily driver both for gaming and regular usage for the forseeable future!

submitted by TheMynx to linux_gaming [link] [comments]


2024.04.12 19:27 Woooojeez 1500-2000 Build, No monitor

1. What will you be doing with this PC? Be as specific as possible, and include specific games (ex: resolution, FPS, settings) or programs you will be using.
2. What is your maximum PRE-TAX budget before rebates and shipping?
3. When do you plan on building/buying the PC? Note: beyond a week or two from today means any build you receive will be out of date when you want to buy.
4. What, exactly, do you need included in the budget? (ex: toweOS/monitokeyboard/mouse/etc)
5. If reusing any parts (including monitor(s)/keyboard/mouse/etc), what parts will you be reusing? How old are they? Brands and models are appreciated.
6. Will you be overclocking (ex: CPU/GPU/RAM)? If yes, are you interested in overclocking right away, or down the line?
7. Are there any specific features or items you want/need in the build? (ex: SSDs, mass HDDs, Wi-Fi / Bluetooth, VR, VirtualLink, tensor cores, large amount of storage or a RAID setup, CUDA or OpenCL support, etc.)
8. Do you have any specific case preferences (ex: mITX/mATX/mid-towefull-tower sizes, styles, colours, window or not, LED lighting, etc.), or a particular color theme preference for the components?
9. Do you need a copy of Windows included in the budget? Note: some post-secondary students can get Windows 10 for free at OnTheHub or through their school's IT software distribution department.
10. Will you be upgrading this PC in the future (ie: will you swap out better parts later on or will you build an entirely new tower later)? If so, when?
11. Do you have a brand preference? (ex: AMD/Intel for CPUs, AMD/NVIDIA for video cards, etc.)
12. What are the specs of your old PC / laptop? Do you want to see if it can be upgraded instead? If so, paste its build from PCPartPicker here.
submitted by Woooojeez to bapccanada [link] [comments]


2024.04.11 22:18 BlizzardBl4ke Help with OS 7.10

Hello! Rookie here; I'm BlizzardBl4ke 'Blizzie', nice to meet you!
So, heard about BB closing... yet, I have this old gentleman (https://www.gsmarena.com/blackberry_curve_9220-4459.php) and wanted to give it a second life. Bought in 2012, and still works like the first day, or well, not exactly. Since BlackBerry closing, it's impossible to download any app as from BlackBerry world and all of that, but I have a little project in mind. I'd like first to solve the problem of app downloading, for example, could you tell me how to download Whatsapp, Telegram, and such apps or how to get a new app store? Is it possible? If so, I'd like to go ahead and 'revamp' the phone changing the camera and RAM to revalue it and use it as everyday phone. Where or how can I find compatible pieces so I don't make a big mess with firmware? Thank you for your attention and knowledge, I'm literally a newbie in Blackberry and need lots of help. :) I'm staying tuned, thank you again!
submitted by BlizzardBl4ke to BlackberryPhoenix [link] [comments]


2024.04.10 20:01 Calm-Masterpiece2192 18 Best AI Presentation Makers in 2024: a Comparison

TLDR: Decktopus is the best AI presentation creator
Creating a presentation from the beginning can take a lot of time, especially when handling various elements like content, design, and visuals. The complexity increases when managing these moving parts.
The good news is that AI is changing the way presentations are made. AI presentation makers use artificial intelligence to simplify the process of creating visually appealing presentations. These tools allow anyone, regardless of their design experience, to quickly create stunning presentations, pitch decks, and slide decks.
With numerous AI presentation makers in the market, choosing one can be overwhelming. In this article, weā€™ll discuss the top 15 AI presentation makers in 2024. The review will cover their features, pricing, pros, and cons to help you make an informed decision.
Letā€™s dive in.

Quick Review

Top 18 AI Presentation Makers You Should Try

Visme

ai presentation makers
**Overview:**Visme is an all-in-one visual design and content authoring software. Its AI presentation maker provides accurate prompts to generate ready-to-use presentations quickly. The tool not only offers a creative head start but also provides design suggestions and customization options.
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Beautiful.ai

image 136
**Overview:**Beautiful.ai is an AI-powered presentation maker designed to simplify the process of creating visually appealing and engaging presentations.
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Storydoc

image 137
**Overview:**Storydoc is an innovative AI-powered presentation maker that transforms the way presentations are created and delivered, combining the power of artificial intelligence with storytelling techniques.
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Canva

image 138
**Overview:**Canva is a popular online design platform offering a user-friendly AI-powered presentation maker. With Magic Design for Presentations, you can generate a first draft of your presentation instantly.
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Design.AI

image 140
**Overview:**Design.AI offers a cutting-edge AI presentation maker designed to simplify the process of creating visually appealing presentations. This all-in-one platform provides a range of powerful features to enhance creative projects.
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Slidesgo

image 141
**Overview:**Slidesgo is an online platform offering free PowerPoint and Google Slides templates. Its AI PowerPoint maker analyzes content to generate visually appealing slides automatically.
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Simplified

image 142
**Overview:**Simplified offers an advanced AI presentation maker that revolutionizes the way presentations are created, aiming to simplify the creative process for users of all skill levels.
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Tome

image 143
Overview:Tome is an AI-powered presentation maker that helps users create professional and engaging presentations without any design skills, using artificial intelligence to analyze content and generate visually appealing slides.
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Gamma

**Overview:**Gamma AI is a smart presentation maker that uses artificial intelligence to simplify creating presentations. Itā€™s designed to assist users in making visually stunning and engaging presentations.
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Plus

**Overview:**Plus is an innovative AI presentation maker that simplifies the presentation creation process using artificial intelligence. It allows users to generate AI presentations or edit slides effortlessly.
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Also read: Top 13 AI Cover Letter Generators for 2023 (+Key Features)

Appy Pie

**Overview:**Appy Pieā€™s AI presentation maker is a user-friendly tool designed to simplify the process of creating engaging presentations using artificial intelligence.
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Wonderslide

**Overview:**Wonderslide is an AI-powered tool for creating presentations quickly. Users can upload a draft slide, select color, logo, themed images, and fonts, and let AI handle the rest.
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SlidesAI

**Overview:**SlidesAI is an innovative AI-powered presentation add-on tool that simplifies creating visually appealing presentations in Google Slides.
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Sendsteps

**Overview:**Sendsteps offers an innovative AI presentation maker that enables users to create engaging presentations in minutes, with a focus on facilitating real audience participation and engagement.
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Decktopus

**Overview:**Decktopus is an AI-driven presentation maker aiming to simplify the process of creating visually appealing and professional presentations, combining intuitive design elements with artificial intelligence technology.
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Slidebean

Slidebean is a tool on the internet that changes the way people make presentations. With just a few clicks, users can make strong presentations that leave a big impression. The special thing about Slidebean is that it separates making the content from designing the slides. This means you can focus on whatā€™s most important ā€“ your message ā€“ while Slidebean makes sure the design looks good.
Slidebean is great for small to medium businesses that might not have a design team. Even if you donā€™t know how to design, you can make slides that look professional because Slidebean has design templates, nice fonts, and good color options. Itā€™s not just like PowerPoint or Keynote; itā€™s better.
Top features of Slidebean:

Prezi

Prezi is a strong AI presentation maker that changes your regular slides into presentations that have an impact. Itā€™s not just about adding slides and text; itā€™s about making a story that holds your audienceā€™s attention. With Prezi, you can give your presentation a dynamic flow, making it more interesting and memorable.
But Prezi doesnā€™t give you a lot of choices to change things after you pick a template. This means that while you can make a great presentation quickly, you might not have a lot of control over how it looks. Even with that, Prezi is good for making a professional presentation fast and easy.
Top features of Prezi:

Kroma

Kroma is a popular AI tool for presentations used by big organizations like Apple and eBay. It gives you access to lots of creative things and many ways to show data, so you can make a presentation that looks great. Whether youā€™re showing data, talking about a project, or sharing a new idea, Kroma can help you do it.
One great thing about Kroma is that it works well with MS PowerPoint and Appleā€™s Keynote. This means you can easily use your existing presentations and make them better with Kromaā€™s strong features.
Top features of Kroma:
submitted by Calm-Masterpiece2192 to AIToolsandUpdates [link] [comments]


2024.04.09 03:15 treatyoyoself Ceritain dong pengalaman lo pakai chat apps populer di Indonesia selama ini (mig33, mxit, Yahoo Messenger, Google Talk, BBM, Line, WhatsApp, Telegram, dll)

mig33

gua pake jaman SMP. Gua pake di Sony Ericsson k510i. Masih pakai jaringan 2G (GPRS atau EDGE). Waktu itu gua pake buat chat sama temen temen SMP. Udah ada group juga.. namanya room. Cukup ngirit karena mostly text. Ga berani kirim gambar. Waktu itu gua pake Indosat IM3. Daripada SMS 1x Rp150 mending make mig33. Konsep kuota data belum ada. Adanya Rp1/kB. Aplikasinya pakai yang versi Java. Ribet lah harus download .jar dari web mig33.

MXIT

gua pake waktu mulai masuk SMK. Ninggalin mig33 karena network effect. Temen temen makenya MXIT yaa ikut. Udah upgrade make ke Nokia N70. Jaringan udah dapat 3G (UTMS, HSDPA bahkan HSUPA). Udah mulai berani kirim gambar. Udah ada konsep kuota. Bela belain nabung 50rb buat beli kuota Telkomsel Flash 100 MB. Cukup buat sebulan!

Yahoo Messenger

Sempet pake pas magang SMK selama 3 bulan. Abis itu ga pernah pake.

Skype

Cuman pake 1-2 kali dalam setahun. Biasanya telepon partner kerjaan di Aussie aja.

BBM

gua pake pas kuliah. Kepaksa karena orang kantor pada pake. Gua kuliah sambil kerja. Anak kuliah waktu itu kepecah antara BBM, WhatsApp dan Line. Sempet beli BB 8520 paling murah dan install 3 apps ini. Tu hape underspecs dan overprice gila. Gua masih pake paket Blackberry Internet Service (BIS) yang termurah. 60rebu/bulan. Madesu banget cm bisa chat. Ga bisa browsing. Buat akalin gw subscribe ke newsletter biar bisa baca-baca di TransJakarta. Ngenes juga. Jaringan masih pakai 3G. Gua pake BB dari Smartfren.. jadi ngandelin EVDO nya smartfren.

WhatsApp.

Karena ngerasa bego beli BB pas lihat canggihnya temen pada pake Android.. gua lego tu barang ngeselin. Orang di kerjaan dan kuliah pada pelan pelan pindah ke WhatsApp. Dengan budget ga jauh dr BB gua dapat Andromax I. Amaze dengan fiturnya. Wow factor ya pas balik dr Mall Ambassador minang ni hape.. Google Maps an di angkot dan gw bisa track macet di rute depan sampe mana. BB sampah emang.
Seneng sama konsep kebebasan Android. Paket data ayo, WIFI juga jalan. Install dr PlayStore atau sideload juga cincay. Gua cukup tech savvy.. jadi kebebasan ini penting banget. Hal ini yg bikin gw ga hepi pake iOS sampe detik ini.
Konsep paket data jelas dah biasa.. 1GB sebulan cukup banget buat chat, kirim gambar. Youtube an juga jadi biasa. Di masa masa ini gw pake 2G aja masih aman buat WA.
Sampe era 4G, 4G+ dan sekarang 5G masih gua pake. Karena network effect semua pake. Awalnya gua sebel krn fitur ga senendang Telegram. Tapi semua orang pake, ya udah. Makin kesini WA ngejar sih.

LINE

Sempet install dan pake buat PDKT sama cewek. Waktu kuliah hehehe. Uninstall krn tu cewek ga ada interest sama gua. HAHAHAHA. Ini app bloat banget. Auto uninstall. Circle gw geser ke WA semua abis kerja.

Telegram

Gw mulai pake abis jadi mandatory chat apps di kantor. Superior apps dibanding WA. Multidevice dari year one bahkan. Gua pake dari jaman pake Andromax I sampe sekarang gua pake Samsung A54 5G.
submitted by treatyoyoself to indonesia [link] [comments]


2024.04.07 04:15 LinsaFTW My top 10 tips and tricks for Minecraft Servers

You want to create the best Minecraft server ever? Here are my top 10 tips for server owners.
1. Optimize Performance:
2. Prioritize Security:
3. Create Engaging Gameplay:
4. Foster Community:
5. Regularly Update Content:
6. Implement Anti-Cheat Measures:
7. Provide Excellent Customer Support:
8. Backup Regularly:
9. Stay Updated:
10. Have Fun!
This are some of the best tips and tricks for running a successful Minecraft server. If you have any other tips to share, please leave your comment below.
Download FlameCord here
submitted by LinsaFTW to FlameCord [link] [comments]


2024.04.06 15:39 sillylossy SillyTavern 1.11.7

Important news

  1. This update includes a substantial update to the Instruct Mode formatting. Since all of the default templates were updated, you may experience merge conflicts on git pull if you updated default instructs/contexts. To fix, make a backup, then do git reset --hard before pulling again.
  2. You may also need to adjust your custom instruct templates to the new format if you previously used workarounds for ST's format limitations. See the documentation for more info: https://docs.sillytavern.app/usage/core-concepts/instructmode/
  3. The "Tags as Folders" setting now requires manually enabling which tags are classified as folders. You can do this in the Tag Management menu.
  4. External media files can now be individually allowed/forbidden for every character and group. The setting to forbid external media will be enabled in the next release by default. Make sure to manually enable media in advance where required.

Backends

Improvements

Extensions

STscript

Bug fixes

https://github.com/SillyTavern/SillyTavern/releases/tag/1.11.7
How to update: https://docs.sillytavern.app/usage/update/

The AI Assistant character contest vote is still going!

Make sure you fill out the form here: https://forms.gle/4vkkqZx7rMN3FZWs5
The contest results will be published by the end of April!
submitted by sillylossy to SillyTavernAI [link] [comments]


2024.04.05 18:54 NimappaNanu Anime Blogger Template Free Download 2024

As a passionate anime fan and blogger, I'm always looking for modern designs for posting my anime reviews, episode recaps, and other content. While there are many costly premium templates available, sometimes all you need is a simple, free alternative that does the job.
After browsing the internet, I discovered two amazing free anime blogger templates that are definitely worth considering in 2024: NineStream and Kumastream.

Ninestream Premium Blogger Template

NineStream is a stylish template with a basic design and effective content organization. Some of its better features are:

KumaStream: Premium Anime Blogger Template

KumaStream, on the opposite side of the style range, is a more vivid and vibrant free template designed for anime fans. Features include:
I'll provide safe, genuine download links for NineStream and KumaStream below. Installing them is simple. Whether you're a new anime blogger or want to refresh your existing site, you can't go wrong with either of these high-quality free options in 2024.
Download NineStream Blogger theme
Download KumaStream Blogger theme
Thanks for Reading!
submitted by NimappaNanu to blogger [link] [comments]


2024.04.05 10:02 Consinium First PC build, 2000ā‚¬, Germany, "futureproof", for gaming

What will you be doing with this PC? Be as specific as possible, and include specific games or programs you will be using.
So far only gaming, Destiny 2, Baldur's Gate 3, Horizon Forbidden West, I'd like to be able to all play them smoothly at a high graphics quality. I'd also like to be set for games that might release in the next few years without having to replace parts any time soon, if that's possible (I'm not very knowledgeable so apologies if that's an ignorant statement).
What is your maximum budget before rebates/shipping/taxes?
Up to 2000ā‚¬
When do you plan on building/buying the PC? Note: beyond a week or two from today means any build you receive will be out of date when you want to buy.
Probably this month, buying maybe in a week.
What, exactly, do you need included in the budget? (ToweOS/monitokeyboard/mouse/etc)
Only the PC itself
Which country (and state/province) will you be purchasing the parts in? If you're in US, do you have access to a Microcenter location?
Germany
If reusing any parts (including monitor(s)/keyboard/mouse/etc), what parts will you be reusing? Brands and models are appreciated.
2 Monitors, Keyboard, Mouse
AOC Gaming CQ27G2U - 27 Inch QHD Curved Monitor, 144 Hz, 1ms, FreeSync Premium (2560x1440, HDMI, DisplayPort, USB Hub)
BenQ GL2480 60,96 cm (24 Inch) Gaming Monitor (Full HD, 1 ms, HDMI, DVI)
WisFox Office Gaming Keyboard
I cant find the mouse model right now, it's just a regular USB gaming mouse.
I also have 3 SSDs that I should be able to use (250gb, 500gb, 2TB) though I'd like to replace the smallest one with a larger one but keep using 3 all in all. If possible I'd like to keep the other 2 in use since my download speed is extremely slow and it would take weeks to redownload every game (i heard it's possible to keep installed games this way?)
Samsung 870 EVO SATA III 2,5 Inch SSD, 250 GB
Samsung 870 EVO SATA III 2,5 Inch SSD, 500 GB
Samsung 870 EVO SATA III 2,5 Inch SSD, 2 TB
Will you be overclocking? If yes, are you interested in overclocking right away, or down the line? CPU and/or GPU?
No
Are there any specific features or items you want/need in the build? (ex: SSD, large amount of storage or a RAID setup, CUDA or OpenCL support, etc)
Only the 3 SSDs, no HDD. Also I'd like to try raytracing (hope this goes here)
Do you have any specific case preferences (Size like ITX/microATX/mid-towefull-tower, styles, colors, window or not, LED lighting, etc), or a particular color theme preference for the components?
No
Do you need a copy of Windows included in the budget? If you do need one included, do you have a preference?
I don't know if that's of importance, but the PC will be standing on the floor and I have pets, so if there's any case that would make cleaning it more accessible that would be great, but not necessary. Other than that, no aesthetic preferences.
Extra info or particulars:
It's my first time building a PC, but I can get help from friends with experience. I'd like this build to be as "futureproof" as possible and hopefully not have to change things for a few years down the line.
Thank you for taking the time to read this! ^
submitted by Consinium to buildapcforme [link] [comments]


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