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I've had a Moonlander for a few years now and it's been incredible. The tenting and split layout completely fixed my hand and wrist pain.

I can't say I've had the same problems with quality as the author. The tenting can wobble if it's not tightened in a balanced position, but once it is, I haven't had it loosen. And the palm rests seem fine to me, but I've learned to put less pressure on my palms. The only issue I've had is the keyboard sliding away from you due to low friction when tented.

My board also came with Cherry MX Browns, which used for a couple of years. I recently switched to low profile key caps and Akko switches for a nicer tactile feel. With tenting, I felt like the cap height and travel distance was too large.


What's your note naming convention? I still haven't settled on one for my own zk system


Not op, but what got me to name (fleeting) notes quickly is to name one main category/author, one subcategory (both limited to a single word) and just the date (year only for citations). Inspired by bibtex keys:

  Dist(24.07.29)Gaussian.md
  Dist(24.07.30)Poisson.md

  Transform(23_06_23)BoxMul.md
  Transform(23_06_24)Ranked.md

  Wilkinson(2012)Grammar.md
  Firth(1957)Words.md
Depending on your sorting preference, put the date first, second or last (I prefer sorting by main category, then date of entry, then subcategory). I use decimals instead of underscores but to each their own.


Just checked my site, and the "Crawled - currently not indexed" pages are just garbage pages, like tags, categories, query params, etc.


What's wrong with that?


Why did you put it on skool?


They should add AI that improves audio as well. Some older MIT and Stanford course playlists have pretty bad audio. It would be nice if they could just enhance the audio in place.


I use Nvidia's Broadcast tool to do it locally on my GPU in realtime. It works fairly well and has made some older videos, especially courses or presentations at conferences satisfactory to watch but I agree it would be great if YouTube could automatically provide it as a tool as well.

I'm hoping to find a tool that removes umms and ahhhs, mouth clicks and other annoying tics.


There was a java tool that could improve audio but it was designed for archival of tape, film audio, and old records and the like. I lost the computer i ran it on, i even paid for it but i can't find the receipt to redownload (or even rebuy it). It worked very well - about as well as i can do manually, and perhaps a few percent better - i don't remember many shimmering artifacts https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xazubVJ0jz4&t=85s [0]

I'd be pleasantly surprised if nvidia can "fix" audio, as i have.. oh, a few thousand hours of audio that i could clean up in an automated way.

[0] hilariously, youtube gave me a copyright strike for this video, even though it's obviously an archival upload. Jerks.


Ah, looks like you need RTX to run. Sadly I only have a 1080ti


I think Nvidia Broadacst is just a repackaged clone of original"RTX Voice", and that one, despite the name, ran also on non RTX cards, including 970.

Perhaps Broadcast will also run? Its even possible you just need to flip value in config to force it to run on nonRTX cards


Anyone taken this course?


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