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What ammuses me is that the little Korg Volcas synced up in the demo can be found really cheaply if you look around. They were low cost units to begin with and are now old enough to be considered classic equipment so there are loads on the market.

The Volca Drum being used is excellent at making all kinds or resonant, spriny noises with its wave guide effects if that's what you're looking for. It's a very distinct, unique sounding little box.

Volcas in general are an affordable way to get started with electronic music making. Cheap enough and easy enough to sell if you change your mind.

(I still really want a Phase 8 though :P )


Coming next year: A Behringer knockoff that's just as good for $250.


ah the savings possible when somebody else does all the original work and RnD


“just as good” with every single corner cut ;)


Not too bad, considering the space it sits in.

Another "physical modeling synthesizer" which I've been looking at for the last few weeks (https://www.ericasynths.lv/steampipe-3153/) goes for €990, which is more or less the same as the phase8, when you consider the currency difference.

Edit: Actually, seems phase8 will be slightly cheaper, my local (Spain) shops seems to sell it for around €950.


I really love the Steampipe and its approach to synthesis, its a lot of fun:

https://www.reddit.com/r/synthesizers/comments/1j7hgoo/makin...

Erica synths makes really solid hardware too.


Phase8 isn't physical modeling, though. It's actually electroacoustic, like a Rhodes.


Find an English pub that needs you.


Not true, it also covers pubs in Wales


Yeah, I have NO clue what this site is even about.


It is a "use it or lose it" style campaign by the looks of it.

Lots of Pubs in the UK are closing down in recent years. Pubs have traditionally been a big part of socialising in the UK. I don't drink anymore so I don't bother unless I am having a pub lunch on a Friday.


Can't you drink non-alcoholic beverage? If the point is socialising, alcohol is not a requirement.

I know a lot of bars in my area also are places to play board games nowadays.


> Can't you drink non-alcoholic beverage? If the point is socialising, alcohol is not a requirement.

It kinda is though depending on who you go to the bar with.

I went to the bar to get fucked up, a lot of my career I've worked in toxic workplaces, so have stressful day and work and then hit the bar.

Most of my mates at the time were heavy drinkers. We are talking about people that would have 6 beers and the bar and have a bottle of Rioja when they get home. Some of these dudes have turned out to be scumbags.

Once I stopped drinking, I never spoke to them again. Not once. So these people weren't my real friends.

> I know a lot of bars in my area also are places to play board games nowadays.

TBH, when I see people playing board games other than like Chess or Draughts as adults (and there are not children present), I just find it embarrassing like it is like some child day care. I appreciate it is a "me" problem, but I can't stand it.


¡Feliz Navidad!


> I’m not even going to bother explaining what an agent is.

Does anyone actually know what exactly an agent is?


Yes, and the post says what it is about 100 words later. It's an LLM running in a loop that can access tool calls.


From the official site: https://www.yangwangauto.com/en/car/u9-xtreme

- 6:59.127 Lap Time - The first lap record on the Nürburgring

- 496.22 km/h - The Fastest Car on the Planet

- 1200v - World's first series-production model with ultra-high-voltage platform

- Over 3000 HP - Global horsepower record for production cars

- 30000 rpm - Global fastest motor rpm - 4 motors


There is an organization doing this in Spain, Adopta un Abuelo: https://www.eib.org/en/stories/isolation-elderly

https://adoptaunabuelo.org


That's awesome, and fitting, since my daughter has an Abuela. :-)


I can highly recommend the book Practical SDR if you want to learn about SDR: https://nostarch.com/practical-sdr


Honest question: what kind of problem does this solve?


It solves a problem for Stripe : potentially evading some incoming regulations in payments in the UK/EU (and U.S probably).

Regulations in payments tend to be very technical, and inserting some crypto/distributed plausible deniability in the mix could get them 5 more years of delay (until the next generation of regulations). It will depend on how those regulations take shape in the coming months.


Second line of the page:

> Stablecoins enable instant, borderless, programmable transactions, but current blockchain infrastructure isn’t designed for them: existing systems are either fully general or trading-focused. Tempo is a blockchain designed and built for real-world payments.

What is different in the details, no idea.


Once you take into account AML and KYC laws, which will obviously be enforced should this gain any sort of adoption. What will be different in practice?


The US is working on a law that may exempt crypto from AML/KYC because "innovation". If that passes there will be a rush to blockchain everything.


I don’t see that happening, mostly because it wouldn’t benefit Trump in any way. He’s already free to (crypto) grift as much as he wants, he doesn’t need looser AML laws. Probably going to go the way of the strategic BTC reserve.


cheap fees, cross border payment without relying on legacy platforms like visa and mastercard. Also the added benefit of programmability


> There's also the interesting effect that people will give you their innermost secrets, knowing you won't tell anyone

This is exactly what David Choe says in this interview: https://youtu.be/HrBhuzHHlhQ?t=127


Is there any way of knowing, just by examining it, whether a given thermal paper is toxic or not?


Yes, you look at it carefully and if it looks like thermal paper it may be toxic.

If the substances used are known to be toxic is another matter but you won't know that even with a correct label because it takes time for us to find out that new substances are toxic.


I think this is the right approach, speaking as someone who went down the rabbit-hole of looking at alternative non-bisphenol or non-phenol image developers. The very little research on the new ones tend to conclude "we don't know if it's toxic in the long term" or in the case of urea-based papers, "it's highly toxic against aquatic life."

To the GP, if the goal is to avoid phenol papers, phenol papers tend to develop deeper black. And in the US, phenol-free papers are new enough the backside often advertises it. Some are very misleadingly labeled BPA-free, which usually means it's made with the very similar and likely equally toxic BPS.


Thank you for your insightful reply, I greatly appreciate it. However, it does not answer my question, unfortunately.


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