3 Antworten2025-08-29 12:20:29
I got curious about this a while back after rereading 'The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck' on a rainy afternoon and hunting around his site. From what I’ve seen, Mark Manson tends to put most of his energy into writing, essays, and a handful of curated online products rather than running an open, ongoing one-on-one coaching service. He has released paid online courses and email programs in the past, and occasionally his team launches time-limited programs, workshops, or group-style coaching experiences. Those usually get announced on his site and via his newsletter, so I ended up subscribing just to catch the next rollout. I also noticed he sometimes does limited cohort offerings with Q&A sessions or community spaces, which feel more like guided courses than personal coaching.
If you want the most accurate, up-to-the-minute info, I’d check markmanson.net (look for sections like ‘shop’ or ‘courses’), sign up for his newsletter, and follow his socials because availability changes. Be wary of third‑party sellers claiming to represent him — legit offerings are promoted through his official channels. If a direct coaching relationship is your goal and his current options don’t fit, consider using his books like 'Everything Is F*cked' plus a local therapist or coach to apply the ideas in a personal setting. Personally, I find his written work and short programs great for reframing things; coaching can come later when you want the accountability piece.
3 Antworten2025-12-29 18:59:05
The question of accessing 'The Complete Short Stories of Mark Twain' for free is tricky. While Twain's works are in the public domain in many countries (due to their age), the specific compilation might still be under copyright if it includes modern annotations or unique editorial work. I often find myself browsing Project Gutenberg or Google Books for classics like Twain's—they’re treasure troves for public domain texts. But if you’re after a particular edition, say, one with footnotes or a fancy intro, you might hit a paywall. Libraries are another great resource; apps like Libby let you borrow digital copies legally.
Honestly, I’ve mixed feelings about hunting for freebies. Twain himself had strong opinions on copyright, and supporting publishers keeps literature alive. But if budget’s tight, sticking to raw, unedited public domain versions is totally valid. Just double-check the edition’s status—sometimes the ‘complete’ label is marketing, not a legal claim.
5 Antworten2025-09-03 01:44:27
Oh, this one used to confuse me too — Vim's mark system is a little quirky if you come from editors with numbered bookmarks. The short practical rule I use now: the m command only accepts letters. So m followed by a lowercase letter (ma, mb...) sets a local mark in the current file; uppercase letters (mA, mB...) set marks that can point to other files too.
Digits and the special single-character marks (like '.', '^', '"', '[', ']', '<', '>') are not something you can create with m. Those numeric marks ('0 through '9) and the special marks are managed by Vim itself — they record jumps, last change, insert position, visual selection bounds, etc. You can jump to them with ' or ` but you can't set them manually with m.
If you want to inspect what's set, :marks is your friend; :delmarks removes marks. I often keep a tiny cheat sheet pasted on my wall: use lowercase for local spots, uppercase for file-spanning marks, and let Vim manage the numbered/special ones — they’re there for navigation history and edits, not manual bookmarking.
3 Antworten2025-11-14 19:37:42
Finding 'Blood Mark' online for free can be a bit tricky since it’s a relatively niche title, but I’ve stumbled upon a few places where you might get lucky. Some fan-translated manga sites occasionally host lesser-known works like this, though the quality can be hit or miss. I’d recommend checking aggregators like MangaDex or Bato.to first—they sometimes have hidden gems uploaded by the community. Just be prepared to dig through tags or search multiple spellings; titles like this often get misspelled or mislabeled.
Another angle is to look for unofficial scanlation groups that specialize in horror or supernatural genres. Discord servers or forums like Reddit’s r/manga often have threads pointing to obscure releases. But fair warning: these sources can vanish overnight due to takedowns, so download anything you find if you want to keep it. Personally, I’d weigh the ethics of reading unofficial uploads against supporting the creators—maybe check if there’s an official digital release first, even if it’s paid.
4 Antworten2025-09-03 20:14:15
Okay, here’s how I usually figure that out when a lecture PDF pops up: I start by checking the file’s metadata and the page footer. The PDF’s properties will often show a creation or last-modified date, and many lecturers stamp a year or semester in the header or footer. If the slides cite papers, the most recent citation year gives a lower bound — for instance, if the newest reference is from 2023, the PDF can’t be older than that.
Next I cross-check the source: the course or lab web page, departmental repository, or a linked GitHub repo usually has a publish date or commit history. If the PDF came from a preprint server like arXiv, the arXiv entry will list submission and revision dates. I also use lightweight tools like the browser’s download timestamp, or right-click → properties, and sometimes run a quick pdfinfo or exiftool sweep if I’m feeling nerdy.
A cautionary note: metadata can be edited, and web pages might host older files without updating the page date. If it matters — like for citing or exam prep — I’ll email the lecturer or check the syllabus for version notes. That usually clears things up and saves me from studying the wrong slide set.
4 Antworten2026-02-21 02:37:15
If you love the witty, slice-of-life humor in 'The Best of Off the Mark Cartoons,' you'll probably enjoy collections like 'The Far Side' by Gary Larson or 'Calvin and Hobbes' by Bill Watterson. Both have that perfect blend of observational humor and absurdity that makes everyday situations hilarious.
I’d also recommend 'Dilbert' by Scott Adams for its sharp workplace satire, though it’s more niche. For something lighter, 'Peanuts' by Charles Schulz has timeless charm, and 'Bloom County' by Berkeley Breathed delivers political humor with a quirky twist. Honestly, any of these will give you that same 'laugh-out-loud while nodding in recognition' feeling.
1 Antworten2025-10-17 13:18:28
You'd think cruise maps would proudly point out the Bermuda Triangle like a haunted tourist attraction, but in practice they rarely do. From my experience sailing on a few Caribbean and Atlantic itineraries, the maps and route diagrams on board focus on ports of call, approximate track lines, and sometimes notable landmarks like reefs or shipping lanes. The so-called 'Bermuda Triangle' is more of a popular-culture region than a formally defined maritime hazard, so ships' passenger-facing maps generally avoid drawing a big ominous triangle on them — it would either freak people out or come off as a gimmick, depending on the cruise line.
That said, you definitely see the triangle show up elsewhere on a cruise in more playful ways. I've seen trivia nights centered on the mystery, souvenir T-shirts, and lecture series where the ship's historian or guest speaker goes over Flight 19 and other stories that fed the legend. If you look at a rough map of where people imagine the triangle to be, it's usually the area roughly between Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico (though different sources draw the corners slightly differently). So if your itinerary crosses that patch of ocean, you could say you sailed through the region, but the map in your cabin probably won't label it as such.
From a safety and navigation standpoint, there's nothing for captains to mark for passengers beyond the standard nautical information. The bridge team navigates with up-to-date electronic charts, radar, AIS, and weather services, and official nautical charts mark hazards like shoals, wrecks, and restricted areas — not mythic zones. International maritime regulations and the safety-of-life-at-sea framework mean cruise operators prioritize clear, factual info rather than folklore. If a line wanted to avoid a particular weather-prone area at certain seasons, they'd alter the route and tell passengers it's for operational reasons or comfort, not 'avoiding the Triangle.'
If you're into the romance of the sea and stories, I love that modern cruises can wink at the mystery without treating it like a real danger. For souvenir hunters and trivia fans, that makes for a fun onboard experience — you get the chill of the story during a midnight deck stroll while the ship hums safely along its plotted course. Sailing through that swath of ocean feels a little like being part of a story, and I personally enjoy pointing it out to friends over a sunset cocktail.
3 Antworten2025-07-12 18:15:28
I can tell you there's a super quick way to add bookmarks without fuss. In most PDF readers like Adobe Acrobat, you just highlight the text you want to bookmark, right-click, and select 'Add Bookmark.' Boom, done. No need to dig through menus. If you're using a free tool like Foxit Reader, the process is similar—just look for the bookmark icon in the toolbar. It’s one of those features that’s hidden in plain sight. I love how it keeps my research organized, especially when I’m juggling multiple chapters or papers. For power users, keyboard shortcuts like Ctrl+B (Windows) or Command+B (Mac) can speed things up even more. Just make sure your PDF editor supports it.