Tasks that automatically create subsequent task. I used that for Laundry, I tick the task and click the when clothes are washing, this schedules another task in 60 minutes that tells me to dry the clothes, then I tick the new task and click the link to schedule another task in 60 minutes to pick up the clothes
Delivery drivers always call and ask me to send my exact location through WhatsApp. I put this Shortcut together real quick to jump me into a conversation with a number that isn’t in my contats. I found similar shortcuts on here, but nothing that quite did what I wanted. Would love to hear feedback on any improvements.
https://www.icloud.com/shortcuts/377932404b154e10baeacf717bd7b384
Updated with usage of clipboard for input. Thanks to u/Ronbruins for the suggestion.
Am i nuts, or does anyone else have to stop listening to some podcasts because of awful voices? Vocal fry drives me nuts. Fake, loud laughing - same. For radio, broadcasters had to have great voices, but anyone can make a podcast and a lot of people have really awful voices.
I know a lot of the reasons behind NOT using Spotify, like not giving them money/time for making exclusive poddos, but i find that the sync between devices is vastly superior on Spotify. But im always willing to try something new.
Am i the only one who actually likes using spotifys podcast features??
A bit long, but very interesting you never get bored and always end up learning new things about your brain and how it affects your body and your life.
https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/huberman-lab/id1545953110
Hello! I have a master’s degree in social work, and am looking to to expand my horizons/knowledge of various therapeutic approaches while I work to get my clinical licensure.
I have been attending virtual conferences and trainings out of general interest and would like podcasts that complement this.
I welcome any suggestions this awesome sub may have! Thanks.
Just finished Hardcore History’s episode about Julius Caesar’s Gallic Wars.
The whole time I was listening I kept asking myself why I’m still listening (its just one guy talking, after all) but I couldn’t get myself to turn it off and now that its over I’m jonesing for more roman history!
Any recommendations? As a close second I’d take similar content on the Crusades.
Edit: So many replies! Thanks everyone, got a lot to check out!
Hey, i kind of remember that there was a podcast about a woman who could watch their neighbours’ daily life from her own flat(yes, nightly as well). I think she lived with her husband and they just had a baby so they were tired and everything and watching their neighbours from across the street only made things worse in their marriage. It could have a criminal element to it but I don’t remember. At that time I listened to a lot of radiolab, npr stuff so it could be one of those. Does anyone remember the name or could link it?
Thanks!
I want autumn to be coming out of every orifice of my body. The 7 Holes of Autumn experience.
So tell me the most autumnal book you’ve heard of. I want long walks though crunchy leaves, while talking about pumpkin pies; Baggy brown sweatshirts, and those stupidly long scarfs; depressed characters who are only happy when it rains because it gives them an excuse to stay inside.
Bonus points for a cheap, cloyingly autumnal cozy murder mystery based on, like, knitting or cheese or some shit. Something that was designed to be painfully autumnal.
hey. I’m looking for a book where the main character makes a very big mistake. and the mistake isn’t justified in the end. maybe they don’t even get closure from the people they’ve hurt.
i don’t want the mistake to be “for the greater good” or a misunderstanding. i want it to be, to put it simply, a major fuck up that has a lot of consequences.
I’m sorry if this is too specific. thanks!
Suggest me a book that as soon as I put it down, I’d want to wipe my memory just to experience the plot again for the first time.
I’m looking for something gripping, something that wants me to skip sleep to read and keeps me on edge with no clue who the perpetrator is.
Edit: Agathe Christie seems to be a good start haha
I’m looking for some weird books to take me out of my comfort zone. Any suggestions please?
It’s my wife’s birthday soon and I want to buy her some books she might enjoy. Lately, she’s been reading and enjoying books that leave her so disturbed and disgusted that she gets visceral reactions while reading - and she can’t bring herself to actually recount these moments to me. She’ll only tell me how much she loves how f***ed up everything about it is.
So, I figured I’d ask Reddit for your suggestions for truly disturbing, graphic, f***ed up books y’all have read.
It doesn’t even have to be well-written - or an, overall, good book. Just books with truly disturbing scenes/passages.
Her go-to genres are horror, thriller, sadistic/masochistic, and non-fiction.
Literally, nothing is off-limits. She has no triggers - as far as I can tell.
While, I can’t recall the names of the books she has read recently (since she’ll barely discuss them), I will say that she was not impressed with ‘The X-files’ until I …
Depending on what you like:
- You want a strategy game: Civ VI
- You want to play a classic game: Heroes III
- You want to survive, with friends: Don’t Starve Together
- You want to seek loot and fight bosses: Terraria
- You want to build a factory: Satisfactory
- You want to build a factory, but harder: Factorio
- You want to build a factory that eats a star: Dyson Sphere Program
- You want to play a cute game with your girlfriend: Dinkum (easy) or Stardew Valley (harder)
- You like to explore the unknown: Subnautica
- You like to optimize a whole colony, with a story: Rimworld
- You like to optimize and explore, but in space: Starsector
- You like the hardcore death experience: Rust
- You like not having a life and getting lost in a game: Dota 2
- You like to shoot things: Apex
- You really like to shoot things: CSGO
- You want to commit genocide and play a strategy game: Stellaris
- You like to play a tactical game: Battle Brothers
- You want to grind levels: …
Hello,
​
I’m looking for a new single player game that has similarities to cyberpunk2077 and skyrim.
I like these two games because I love making a character, being able to choose my own weapons and armour, having options on what style of combat I use
I’m looking for some more games that are similar in this aspect!
​
To clarify: When I say ‘combat like Skyrim or cyberpunk 2077’ I just meant that have combat - I dont mind what kind of combat the game actually has, I worded the title quite poorly :)
Hi, so to preface, she’s not a gamer, she’s an outdoor cat, her only exposure to gaming was the Sims 3, Stardew Valley, Trine 4, and Overcooked 2.
Tried to let her play the Sims 4, got bored very quickly, like not even 3 in game the Sims days.
She likes Stardew a lot, but not for it’s farming, she always go to the mines, likes to discover new levels and collect rewards/money for better gears.
I figured that she’s more into the exploring type, like an RPG maybe, but she’s afraid that she’s not good enough for the RPG games that I play. She saw me play Elden Ring and GoW, maybe she got scared off.
Any game suggestions to ease her in to gaming? Because I’m getting sick of playing Stardew with her, it’s just so mind numbingly repetitive, no offence to people who loves it.
Edit: Lots of suggestions, thank you so much guys, I’ll check them all out.
Role-playing as a mage has always been appealing to me and I’m trying to scratch that itch. I’m open to many kinds of genre - Action RPG, isometric tactics, strategy, turn-based combat are all welcome,
Maybe a bit niche, but I like to find a game for the playstation that gives that kind of vibe. Not to difficult, a very cool open world theme and very relaxing. Maybe where you can build nice stuff, or just roam around looking for treasures. I saw a trailer of Tchia and that had the right vibes (just isn’t released yet).
I played No Man’s Sky a while and although is a great game, it maybe is a bit too big and repetitive for me.
Ps. If you know of another game that is about exploring a world and isn’t about crafting, let me know. If you know if a totally different game you play when u just want to relax your brain after a busy day at work, feel free to share as well
I suppose it doesn’t have to be procedurally generated? But I doubt such a game could be made in any other way :P.