Yeah I'm not an expert by any means but my understanding is the Teensy 4.1 is especially ideal for DIY synths between the number of pins available and its strengths as an audio processor.
I think it's fine as a metric if you read it correctly.
100% means a film is extremely agreeable with whatever audience it has managed to get to. For major releases this can ultimately mean it's actually lacking anything particularly bold or interesting. This results in things like Frost/Nixon or Knives Out having higher ratings than broadly acclaimed films like Mulholland Drive or even There Will Be Blood; I know which ones I'd be more likely to put on with my extended family even if I don't especially like them.
But yeah, it's amazing how many people still don't grasp it after decades of getting angry about it.
One I do occasionally that I feel like gets a great mid point between the passiveness of knitting and more thoroughly engaged effort of things like woodworking has been making pop up cards.
I seem to have an intuitive competency at it but the combination of figuring out the layout, getting the measurements down and preparing the materials (I'll usually use basic card and style the individual pieces of card to match what I need e.g. making a card of floor-boarding for the wooden floor base) gives a huge amount of repetitive work that can be done while watching something.
The obvious next step is to invest time getting into origami so I can do more complex layouts.
Football leagues are in a bit of a weird position here where one league (English) being drastically stronger in pure monetary terms than the rest means the others can't really let up.
Similarly there's quite a lot of push from the most powerful teams in some of these leagues to break off and form a European Super League; with Spain's two biggest teams being the biggest backers of the project.
ETA: not agreeing with how aggressive they are exactly, but do think long term they're probably in a lot of trouble if/when money starts to properly force a European Super League into existence.
From what I've seen very little. I _think_ it's something to do with the kind of people who work on embedded systems generally wanting the freedom that comes with making things from scratch resulting in not that much interest in repurposing old things outside of making them work with their overall IoT network.
a. to salvage the microcontroller and other relevant parts (probably worth $4 off a board that would cost $100+ to replicate)
b. a weirdly hostile attitude about the ethics of reverse engineering regardless of the motives (guessing people have been burned a lot with people stealing their designs)
I've mostly worked on the frontend and don't have much knowledge of embedded systems at all but it wasn't anywhere near as hard as I expected. Keen to find some other ESP32 devices to tweak (suggestions welcome!). I guess even if making them unflashable becomes the norm it won't be too hard to just swap the ESP32 off the board with a new one.