I think it is mostly the massive success. Some people have a belief that anything that is very popular is by definition bad.
UNY0N
An originally original gameboy. Still worked until about 2 years ago. I assume there's just a little battery or a capacitor that needs replacing, but I haven't had the time to look into it.
I have a prusa M4 with multi-material head, and I am super happy with it. It started as a M3, and has been upgraded twice to become what it is today.
It was expensive, but prusa really does have great support for free, which is worth a LOT. And the upgradability means you end up spending less if you keep with the hobby over years.
But one caviat, I have the printer set up and my friend's house, because he has more space and free time. So most of what I know about it comes from his experience, not mine. I do lots of CAD, but I don't often actually touch the printer myself.
If you could use some of the Tuxcart resources/engine, perhaps a vehicle-based battle game with a garage for customization of your vehicle?
I'd say keep it simple to start. Perhaps a turn-based tactics game like final fantasy tactics advance, or more 3D, like XCOM?
I have no idea where you are getting your information from, but it is certainly not reality. Surveys show that public opinion of the Israeli government is falling steadily across Western Europe, including Germany.
And free speech is protected in Germany, it is by no means illegal to denounce or criticise any government or group.
I replied to someone else in this thread, you an just read it there, OK?
I use Obsidian for daily task and project management, but also to play / manage TTRPGs. So Joshua Plunkett is my go-to guy for this purpose.
https://www.patreon.com/JPlunkett
Some of the tools/plugins he uses are generally useful, so even if you don't play TTRPGs he is a great resource.
This is a guide with an example vault that does a great job of showing what obsidian can do. It's the best I've found so far.
And now for my favorite plugins.
Here are my must-have community plugins:
- dataview (an absolute must)
- meta bind (a powerful metadata upgrade)
- tasks (a must for to-do lists in obsidian)
- quickadd (great for partially automating repetitive tasks)
I have others installed, but these four are the ones I'm actually using 95% of the time.
I also use Obsidian sync to synchronise across devices. It works like a charm and isn't expensive, but there are also great free options for synching if you are so inclined to do a little setup work. Also, if you already have a cloud service, you can just define a could folder as your vault, and that works too as long as you never work offline.
And lastly, my one bit of advice:
Simpler is better. This program is incredibly flexible and powerful, and it will be tempting to install every plugin you come across. It is REALLY easy to get lost in the endless options, and constantly be installing new shiny plugins, redoing your vault over and over again to use new features you just found out about.
It's better to really learn a few plugins, and use them to actually make you life easier. If dataview + tasks alone can make a process 90% automated, then it's not really worth your time to do a deep dive into some other plugin that could get you to 92%.
I hope this helps!
This is not exactly an answer to your question, but I thought I would share anyway.
I use Obsidian for all sorts of PC work, and there are a multitude of plugins and scripts to automate and organise all sorts of tasks. I have no need for any scripts outside of this program.
Edit: let me know if you are interested and want some tips. There are a million tutorials and articles out there too.
I haven't tried it out yet, but the cypher system seems like a good fit.
I haven't had any problems like that, but I generally don't leave my screen on. So perhaps I would have this issue, but just never notice it because of how I use the device.
I'm very conscious of energy use, I almost always manually set my laptop to sleep if I'm leaving it idle for a while.
Interval fasting.