if you put them on in the right order a korok pops out and gives you a seed
traceur201
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Joined 1 month ago
Cake day: July 11th, 2025
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traceur201@piefed.socialto Progressive Politics@lemmy.world•Don’t Resort to Censorship to Fight Populism - A dire lesson from Brazil.English3·11 days agodeplatforming nazis is a civic duty
traceur201@piefed.socialto Progressive Politics@lemmy.world•Bill Burr Says ‘CNN and Fox News Are a F—ing Disease,’ Fires Back at ‘Horrible’ Conservatives Bashing Him as ‘Woke’: ‘They’re Racists’ and ‘Cowards’English20·13 days agoWow I didn’t really expect Burr to align so strongly against the system but I’m here for it.
traceur201@piefed.socialto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Is it okay to cover the outside of a microwave in aluminum to prevent or lessen microwave WiFi interference?English6·15 days agorouter: “I’m not locked in here with you. You’re locked in here with ME”
traceur201@piefed.socialto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•[SOLVED] If I subtract a semitone (100 cents) from 1 Hz, what is its frequency in Hz after that?English8·29 days ago12 semitones to .5hz, 24to .25hz, 36 to .125hz
traceur201@piefed.socialto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•[SOLVED] If I subtract a semitone (100 cents) from 1 Hz, what is its frequency in Hz after that?English34·29 days agoCents are a measure of difference between two frequencies and can’t be converted directly to hz on its own.
An initial frequency in hz and an offset in cents can be used to calculate a second frequency in hz, such as in your initial question. Using the formula from wikipedia f1 * 2^(c/1200) = f2, we get 1hz * 2^(-100/1200) = .9439hz. Note that +1200 cents is double (2^1) and -1200 cents is half (2^-1) the original frequency
traceur201@piefed.socialto Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•We should be able to legally have a different name just for work for better work/life separationEnglish3·30 days agoI’ve done this! highly recommended
I think if you want 10+ years with high assurance you probably want to burn the data to archival quality BD-R disks (not the dye based ones)
The right spinning platter hard drives might have a decent chance to make it 10 years but there’s a lot of possible failure modes and also a decent chance that when you try spinning it back up it gives nothing but read errors.
For cases for “only” 10-30 years I might pick a pelican-like case inside a makeshift wooden coffin-like outer layer. For longer I’d probably use a metal box like an ammo box inside the plastic case and a stone outer layer instead of wood