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It has passed me by as well. I've been living in one of the largest cities for my entire life and have never batted an eye. There's just as much of every other cuisine as there is katsu curry.

I could probably make a 'The x-ification of Britain' for quite a lot of food items. Majority of brits in the comments echoing the sentiment.

Also, that site should probably do something about the botted comments?


Whilst I'm sure that this is happening to an extent, what are your thoughts on well known figures within the scene saying they are having issues?


On any given day there will be, at Riot's scale, thousands of people experiencing technical issues.

The one well-known person mentioned in the article matches Riot's explanation at https://www.reddit.com/r/leagueoflegends/comments/1civ4l7/up..., where the issues are self-inflicted by people trying to modify their systems to meet Vanguard's requirements. Vanguard itself isn't the problem.

> About ~0.7% of the playerbase bypassed Microsoft’s enforcement for TPM 2.0 when they installed Windows 11, but the rollout of Vanguard requires that those players now enable it to play the game. This requires a change to a BIOS setting, which differs based on the manufacturer. Vanguard does not and cannot make changes to the BIOS itself.

BIOS settings can be confusing, and we’ve seen two niche cases where it’s created an issue.

The first is that many manufacturers prompt a switch to UEFI mode when TPM 2.0 is enabled, but if the existing Windows 11 installation is on an MBR partition, it would become unbootable afterwards. Some OEMs support LegacyBoot mode with TPM 2.0, but to support UEFI mode, Windows 11 must be installed on a GPT partition. Microsoft has a tool that can help avoid a reformat and reinstall if you’re in this scenario.

The second was a player we spoke to that accidentally also enabled SecureBoot with a highly custom configuration. While Vanguard makes use of the SecureBoot setting on VALORANT, we elected not to use it for League, due to the older hardware that comprises its userbase. Older rigs can have compatibility issues with this setting, and that’s actually one of the primary reasons the Vanguard launch was delayed.

For example, some GPUs are known to have Option ROM that is not UEFI SecureBoot capable (especially older cards), and sometimes this can result from players having flashed it themselves to “unlock” the card. If the Option ROM isn’t signed, enabling SecureBoot would prevent your GPU from rendering anything (since it won’t boot), resulting in a black screen. There would be two ways to fix this: Connect the monitor to an integrated graphics card (if you have one) and then disable SecureBoot in BIOS. Remove your CMOS battery to reset back to default settings.

Vanguard's kernel code never even runs in these scenarios.


classic trolley dilemma. i'd do the same thing, if few % has issues, that can be fixed later, having whole industry that's creating and selling cheats, is just too big an issue to simply ignore.

in the grand schema, you'll lose few % of playerbase, in exchange you'll get much more happy customers, so in the end it will be a win.


I use Logseq for all my note taking and documentation.

I will often mark pages as 'public' and commit the modified files to my Github repo - which triggers a website update workflow to my docs.mypersonaldomain.com.

If I want to document further and for whatever reason it is not something that looks great on Logseq, then I pull the data out and use whatever. Usually Github, as I typically want as much content I've worked on to be visible to the world.


They don't list the 2023 version on their webpage, but it is located here: https://jonathanbrochu.com/thumb-cals/tc-2023_en-us.pdf and https://jonathanbrochu.com/thumb-cals/tc-2023_en-us_extra-wd...


Just in time for 2024!


No need to guess, the very first header is 'How It Works'..


that's not a visual guide, and the thumbs along with above and below mentioned are confusing.


Your thumbs run vertically along the sides of the card, parallel to each other. You use them to cover anything to the sides of the month header(/footer) you're looking at. I think it's that "not under or above" description from the link that's confusing.

Find the header/footer for the right month. Use your thumbs to cover everything to the right or left.


Doesn't a thumb then obscure the label of the month you're identifying?


Not if you put them to the right and left of the month's label. That's the whole point. The thumbs cover everything to the right and left of the label.


I had a similar experience.

I purchased 1 year of MuseScore PRO+, March 2022 and stopped using it a few months later, but forgot to unsubscribe. I'd get an email or two from MuseScore every few months, but usually just marked read and forgot about it.

MuseScore hid the upcoming renewal reminder at the bottom of a newsletter styled email, two months early and then essentially said 'we reminded you about this change' later on.

An email titled "Your new year of MuseScore PRO+" arrived Jan 29th 2023 - quite a length email with lots of blue buttons telling me to read more about customer success, values of the products, how they've added x amount of new music scores to my subscription yadda yadda.

Then it goes on to fill up the screen with 'top scores' with images, more buttons to explore - where to go for help, discover new music........ blah blah, typical new year new company email. Except the very, very bottom of this email stated 'Oh yeah we're going to be renewing in March'. I had no emails from MuseScore between this newsletter and the renewal. So it fell completely off my radar until I had a 'Payment Received' email.

I then tried to refund, knowing that you have 14 days from subscription - and was offered a discount. The same style as the article, except the offer was 45% not 35% - heavily pushing how this was the best they could do in my really unfortunate circumstance. I thought, that doesn't sound right - and stumbled across lots of articles on Reddit about just quoting their own terms.

I emailed back, quoting the TOS and then received a very robotic 'prorated refund of the amount.. has been issued to you" email.

Since unsubscribing I have started to receive sales emails - that I could block but find it amusing to see how long it goes on. I count, between March 2023 to today:

12 'Spring Sale' emails, ranging from 65%, 70%, 83% off annual plans 4 '[Last Chance] emails, same discount range 1 'For your eyes only' 70% off 11 'Summer Sale' emails, some of them 'special summer sale' 1 'BLACK FRIDAY SALE' 1 '[Last Chance] Summer Sale'

Promotional emails 2023 by month: March - 1 April - 2 May - 7 June - 9 July - 8 August (to date) - 3

I'm just interested to see if the rate of emails continues to grow or will hover around 1-2 per week. Has also become ritualistic to clear MuseScore emails from my mailbox - which is quite therapeutic.


It would be interesting to have your perspective, as an Obsidian user, on Logseq(https://logseq.com/). I say this, as like you - I moved towards this for local-first file storage, where content can be edited on any device with any editor and where I have more control over my data.

I did try obsidian briefly, but eventually gravitated towards Notion for knowledge and project management - but found that the bulk of the content I put into this would eventually go stale/unused simply because content was not linked and would instead be held in a table, within a project/area full of other pages of notes. I then found myself on Logseq for the reasons mentioned prior.


I'm using and enjoying Logseq but I don't think I am getting as much out of backreferences as other people. I try to keep projects under a single page and make additions to that page. I'm curious how you are using it, if you have time to share? I am always hoping to steal some ideas that improve my usage for note tools.


I switched to Logseq from Obsidian and like it a lot. The PDF annotation features and ability to use Org Mode are what won me over.


I'm an IT Admin with 15+ sites across my country. I'm not angry about this change.

Myself and most of the people I've networked with either have or are transitioning away from other browsers, towards Edge. As a browser, it's fine. It has good PDF viewing/editing features, performant and works well with organisational SSO.


Are you serious? The best /useful things for you are PDFs and SSO? Both of these features are not what makes a web browser super duper. PDF viewing is available in all major browsers. <rant> SSO works in all web browsers - unless you’re using Windows XP as your enterprise cloud server running java and oracle and your asp.net web app requires a microsoft browser running in internet explorer legacy mode. </rant>


I stated two things I like about it over it's competitors, I didn't brand them as the best or most important features on offer.

I specifically stated PDF editing, not just viewing PDF files.

SSO works better on Edge in a work environment, mainly as it connects to the Windows profile. This means that I do not need to make changes to additional browsers or have end users struggling to sign in to various applications. Specifically with Edge, I can simply provide each user profile a folder with shortcuts to the likes of email quarantine, support, Outlook etcetera and they will either see their account listed or only need to enter their email address.

Coupled with appropriate training, this has cut down on users signing into Microsoft login pages that have been designed to look like the legitimate organisation using logo's and other branding. When in doubt, the users can visit the shortcut provided to them.


Yeah, unless you're a shop running outlook and teams, not sure you really have a say here. Maybe this is what customers want.

Also, not entirely clear that verge isn't just knee jerk reporting. Any sys admins that have actual first hand experience with this and can confirm?


Does that mean you ban users from using browsers that are not Edge?


No.


yeh, now maybe. Ruining something that works fine can't end poorly.


It's at least once per month.


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