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authorPaul Buetow <paul@buetow.org>2025-02-22 21:06:58 +0200
committerPaul Buetow <paul@buetow.org>2025-02-22 21:06:58 +0200
commitf5676ca1957a200b0c15796b2a0ce7a08b0b5eeb (patch)
tree8ca783c19565040a2b686082fb8dc192dc75b1db /gemfeed
parentf8ab2325d566a14cd72559634e587cecd50ebfd0 (diff)
Update content for md
Diffstat (limited to 'gemfeed')
-rw-r--r--gemfeed/2009-02-13-sgi-onyx-3200.md6
-rw-r--r--gemfeed/2024-08-05-typing-127.1-words-per-minute.md4
2 files changed, 6 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/gemfeed/2009-02-13-sgi-onyx-3200.md b/gemfeed/2009-02-13-sgi-onyx-3200.md
index f566f356..dd523bcc 100644
--- a/gemfeed/2009-02-13-sgi-onyx-3200.md
+++ b/gemfeed/2009-02-13-sgi-onyx-3200.md
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ For nostalgia, I've kept this output of the 'dmesg' around. It's from an SGI Ony
* 4 x 400 MHz IP35 MIPS CPUs
* 4GB of RAM
-[./sgi-onyx-3200/desk.webp](./sgi-onyx-3200/desk.webp)
+[![./sgi-onyx-3200/desk.webp](./sgi-onyx-3200/desk.webp)](./sgi-onyx-3200/desk.webp)
We used this monster when I was a student worker at the Fraunhofer Institute for Production Technology around the year 2006. It operated a walk-in 2-sided 3D cave (unfortunately, I don't have any pictures of that cave), where you could literally walk around with a set of VR glasses and see everything in 3D (that was when there wasn't any Oculus Quest yet). That was useful for running industrial simulations.
@@ -57,11 +57,11 @@ USB Human Interface Device: device id 0 type keyboard
USB Human Interface Device: device id 0 type mouse
```
-[./sgi-onyx-3200/collage.webp](./sgi-onyx-3200/collage.webp)
+[![./sgi-onyx-3200/collage.webp](./sgi-onyx-3200/collage.webp)](./sgi-onyx-3200/collage.webp)
I was mainly working on drilling simulations on this machine. Sometimes I worked directly at one of the 2 terminal screens of the Onyx, or often I used a nearby Linux machine and forwarded the X11 windows to my local screen.
-[./sgi-onyx-3200/collage2.webp](./sgi-onyx-3200/collage2.webp)
+[![./sgi-onyx-3200/collage2.webp](./sgi-onyx-3200/collage2.webp)](./sgi-onyx-3200/collage2.webp)
E-Mail your comments to `paul@nospam.buetow.org` :-)
diff --git a/gemfeed/2024-08-05-typing-127.1-words-per-minute.md b/gemfeed/2024-08-05-typing-127.1-words-per-minute.md
index 94900c69..a01e284e 100644
--- a/gemfeed/2024-08-05-typing-127.1-words-per-minute.md
+++ b/gemfeed/2024-08-05-typing-127.1-words-per-minute.md
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# Typing `127.1` words per minute (`>100wpm average`)
-> Published at 2024-08-05T17:39:30+03:00
+> Published at 2024-08-05T17:39:30+03:00; Updated at 2025-02-22
```
,---,---,---,---,---,---,---,---,---,---,---,---,---,-------,
@@ -213,6 +213,8 @@ Interested in the Glove80? I suggest also reading this review:
As I mentioned, keyboards will remain an expensive hobby of mine. I don't regret anything here, though. After all, I use keyboards at my day job. I've ordered a Kinesis custom build with the Gateron Kangaroo switches, and I'm excited to see how that compares to my current setup. I'm still deciding whether to keep my Gateron Brown-equipped Kinesis as a secondary keyboard or possibly leave it at my in-laws for use when visiting or to sell it.
+> Update 2025-02-22: I've received my custom Kinesis Adv. 360 build with the Gateron Baby Kangaroo key switches. I am absolutely in love! I will keep my Gateron Brown versin around, though.
+
## Conclusion
When I traveled with the Glove80 for work to the London office, a colleague stared at my keyboard and made jokes that it might be broken (split into two halves). But other than that...