This is a very nicely presented video, but I discovered it 20 years too late! Back in the early 90's I was experimenting with b-spline surfaces for car exteriors. I needed to reverse engineer our CAD system, and teach myself to program. There was no internet resources for normal people then, no IT people around either. And I'm no mathematician, so I programmed everything geometrically. Gerald Farin's book helped with some breakthroughs, but I had to ignore all the heavy formulae. I was finally able to make a program to help create the very precise, smooth surfaces needed for vehicle exteriors seen on many well known cars driving around since then.
My nearest transport is a nice grassy tram track. Trams can rumble past street cafes and pedestrian areas with less disturbance and smell than a busy car road. But they don't have the speed of an underground or rural train. Commuters usually want the fastest option. Trams have their place as part of an integrated system. But they take up surface space and get held up when they intersect with traffic or deep snow. Safety-wise they do occasionally hit an errant car or person on the line. A friend was hit and in a coma after not spotting a tram while crossing at a bad place. But people in the city normally get out of the way as they don't want the driver to ring his loud bell at them.
So trams have their pros and cons.
Thanks but that is just the long list of communities with minimum information on each one. Lots of scrolling. And you can easily miss something. I'd expect some hierarchical structure or cross referencing, where similar communities can be found together. And you can skip areas that don't interest you. Music, Tech, Travel, Dogs, Cars, Politics, the Environment,...
is there a way to navigate communities by their topic. Or is it only search?
I earned me a cooool fifty wing-wangs.
Death by snoo-snoo!
Who is your Smizmar?
Thanks. I already tried Smb4K. It finds the LAN shares and mounts them. But they are only mounted when Smb4K is running. I need them permanently mounted.