Neato indeed, but the color contrast for copy and other elements doesn't meet AA accessibility standards (even my young-ish eyes have a bit of trouble). Still, this is in line with a project I've been meaning to do, so this is pretty great stuff.
Power creep. I stopped playing in 2004 or so, and the number of expansions since then has been a tad more than 20. And the number of traits and abilities has skyrocketed.
They do reprint it periodically—seems like it gets a bunch of specialty versions. But it hasn't been printed in a standard set in almost 15 years, as far as I know.
Howdy, fellow KC resident. They are still building apartment complexes in Lenexa, but they are all near the Public Market, so. Not exactly the cheaper side of things. South KC is growing, but mostly higher-end homes it seems.
> I'm currently setting up a Plex in my home to play our families "most popular" movies and I genuinely want to buy these movies, pay for them, and just have them but I can't do that so I have to pirate them.
I recently found my old copies of the Calvin & Hobbes collections (The Days are Just Packed, etc.). I read them when I was around 8, and I have a son due next year. Can't wait to pass it on.
> "In conclusion, TPM 2.0 is not just a recommendation—it’s a necessity for maintaining a secure and future-proof IT environment with Windows 11," Hosking adds.
> with Windows 11
I'm not a programmer or a sysadmin or anything of the sort — am I reading this correctly? The way Hosking worded that makes me think TPM exists to solve a problem with Windows security?
As a product designer for a finance app, I can tell you a few things we've discovered during our research:
- Most users are satisfied with an "at a glance" view of
various things (e.g., their credit score) coupled with a low desire to "go a level deeper" (for credit score, this means low-to-no interest in seeing open credit lines, which factors affect their VantageScore 4.0 score, and so on)
- List of recurring transactions (read: subscriptions) is a huge value add
- Spending by category and category overview is useful when speaking with a financial consultant
This is a sample of "what users want," more or less. I can also state, empirically (with our user base, at least), that Joe Public does not care about goals or goal-setting, and rarely thinks in those terms.
This is excellent! I've been using it all day. I do wish it was a bit denser (similar to Drudge Report), but the product is neat enough as is. Congrats!