https://github.com/RomRider/apexcharts-card
📈 A Lovelace card to display advanced graphs and charts based on ApexChartsJS for Home Assistant - GitHub - RomRider/apexcharts-card: 📈 A Lovelace card to display advanced graphs and charts based o...
https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/66629505
Spain's entire coaching staff from their Women's World Cup win, except for head coach Jorge Vilda, have resigned over the Luis Rubiales row.
I recently got solar installed at my place and was wondering if anyone had tips on things like:
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-08-07/live-updates-fifa-womens-world-cup-matildas-vs-denmark-eng-nga/102697684
The Matildas beat Denmark 2-0 to reach FIFA Women's World Cup quarterfinals. Earlier, England edges past Nigeria 4-2 on penalties in Brisbane.
https://www.kotaku.com.au/2023/08/baldurs-gate-3-delay-shows-the-xbox-series-s-still-a-headache-for-developers/
As Baldur's Gate 3 holds its Xbox launch while it optimises for the Series S, the lower-powered console is once again under fire.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/1977735
Wow. What an experience.
It wasn't all smooth sailing. I even took a month break thinking I might not come back to it, but boy I'm glad I did.
I'm new to souls like, only having played Elden Ring before this (which was amazing). Sekiro was a game that I picked up afterwards, and struggled with early on. It felt like a departure to everything I'd learned in gaming to this point. You don't want to dodge, you want to deflect. Holding block helps you recover. Parrying will beat a boss quicker than trying to drive down their health. Once these things start to click, defeating bosses feels like a true accomplishment.
Fighting the end game bosses had my heart rate going like no other boss battles I can remember. Elden Ring had some memorable and awe inspiring bosses, but the feeling in Sekiro when you're about to break the posture of a boss for a final deathblow was indescribable.
If there's anyone left who hasn't given Sekiro a go, do yourself a favour. It takes some time for it to click, but when it does, it's something special.
Wow. What an experience.
It wasn't all smooth sailing. I even took a month break thinking I might not come back to it, but boy I'm glad I did.
I'm new to souls like, only having played Elden Ring before this (which was amazing). Sekiro was a game that I picked up afterwards, and struggled with early on. It felt like a departure to everything I'd learned in gaming to this point. You don't want to dodge, you want to deflect. Holding block helps you recover. Parrying will beat a boss quicker than trying to drive down their health. Once these things start to click, defeating bosses feels like a true accomplishment.
Fighting the end game bosses had my heart rate going like no other boss battles I can remember. Elden Ring had some memorable and awe inspiring bosses, but the feeling in Sekiro when you're about to break the posture of a boss for a final deathblow was indescribable.
If there's anyone left who hasn't given Sekiro a go, do yourself a favour. It takes some time for it to click, but when it does, it's something special.
https://press-start.com.au/news/playstation/2023/07/18/julys-playstation-plus-extra-deluxe-games-are-available-now/
July's PlayStation Plus Extra/Deluxe Games Are Available Now
Can someone point out what the major differences are (or does this exist somewhere already)?
I've been on Android for years now and don't really understand what made Voyager too iOS. The only real differences I see are fonts and they currently look better/cleaner on the iOS version.
Are there functional differences between the two? Or is it really just font and spacing?
I just bought a mini PC to use as a Plex Server and realised that maybe it's a good way to host my Home Assistant instance as well. Currently HA is on a raspberry pi 4.
What's the best approach to get both running on a mini PC? And is it even the best approach or should I just leave HA the way it is now?
Mini PC I got is the Beelink EQ12
@yesterdayshero
@lemmy.world