Since this is unfortunately not common knowledge yet, let’s spread some information. Here is the guide for what to do when someone is having a tonic-clonic seizure, as described by Epilepsy Action:
• Protect them from injury (remove harmful objects from nearby)
• Cushion their head
• Look for an epilepsy identity card or identity jewellery – it may give you information about their seizures and what to do
• Time how long the seizure lasts
• Once the jerking has stopped, help their breathing by gently placing them in the recovery position (see below)
• Stay with the them until they are fully recovered
• Be calm and reassuring
Call for an ambulance if any of these things apply:
• You know it is their first seizure
• The seizure lasts for more than five minutes
• They have one tonic-clonic seizure after another without regaining consciousness between seizures
• They are seriously injured during the seizure
• They have trouble breathing after the seizure has stopped
This game popped up in my Youtube recommendations: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gr5t9bRZ7Jw and it looks badass.
pixelart on the modern web?
image-rendering: pixelated;
HiDPI users will thank you (or at least i will)
it's not perfect but it's better than blurry pixelart
(edit: spec recommends crisp-edges buuut not sure whether i should suggest that or not re. replies)
The equivalent of optimizing code but for AFK tasks.
I was watching several ways you can fold clothing, and you can go for:
Fast methods (you use them when space and organization is not an important thing for you). See: the japanese folding method.
Normal methods (like the one your grandma taught to you, idk why would people choose doing these).
Hard methods (generally made for storing clothes in the minimum possible space, and for easy organizing). See: the Irene method, Marie Kondo method.
And there’s also the army roll folding method, idk how to label it.