Beginners (2010) dir. Mike Mills
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Beginners (2010) dir. Mike Mills

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The third part of my Blender Character modelling tutorial series is out, meaning all the actual modelling portion is done, so you can fully model your character now. There is still more to come, though.
Beginners (2010) dir. Mike Mills
Related to yesterday's topic of 'don't get scammed.' If you're a beginner, go to a library (college - elibrary or in-person, or local, or online app like Hoopla and Libby, or library site like archive.org) and look at the Language Learning Resources that are there.
They are likely to be:
Free (since in a library)
Structured Resources (so you'll have a decent chance of learning the basics in a guided way, they will guide you through grammar and new vocabulary, pronunciation, the writing system, listening, reading, and speaking/writing with their exercises and/or a little creativity on your part).
You can get an idea of what quality resources exist to study the language you're learning, what kind of information you'll need to learn, and the most common ways that information is taught. So if you DO want to go find a resource that costs money, you have an idea of the resources you want and why.
Maybe you want to hire a tutor, because you saw the library textbooks and they can't provide you live practice chatting with another person. Maybe you want to pay for Graded Readers in Pleco app for Chinese, because the graded readers in the library did not have audio included and did not define Every word you found confusing. Maybe you saw a kanji reference book, but it did not include mnemonic stories, and you Know mnemonic stories help you remember information, and there's a book that costs $20 dollars that appears to include mnemonics for every kanji so you're eager to try it. Maybe you really liked Pimsleur in the library, but you ran out of check out time for it, and you know you want to keep working through the Pimsleur materials, so you decide to buy it. Those are all reasonable reasons to spend money on learning resources, that did not pressure you or confuse you as a beginner by trying to prey on you 'not knowing what you needed or how much.' Which a lot of online websites and videos targeted at beginner language learners are trying to do, convince you to spend a lot of money quick on something that may or may not even be useful to you.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
@challenge52: Challenge 52 Tutorial Videos, Join The C52 Discord Community!.
Challenge52 is like a cross between a year-long art challenge and a drawing course. I haven't had a chance to go through the whole thing yet, but from what I have seen, I think it would be a great place for beginners to start out, and also for anyone else to stretch their drawing muscles. It can't hurt, anyway!
Also, it's free. Can't beat that price :D
Helped a friend switch to linux
and it went off without a hitch! Which is amazing because I am a monkey on a typewriter when it comes to computer shenanigans and this is a very different Linux distro (Ubuntu Studio) and my super-specific instructions only covered Linux Mint. But friend is asking for MY help because he clearly has no better alternative and also had to struggle with the mess four OS updates made in three days.
How desperate Windows 11 has made us.
Wasn't that hard though. It took about an hour to make the bootable USB drive, start up Ubuntu Studio for the first time and then get back into WIndows and most of that time was waiting for the computer to finish down/up-loading stuff (and of course playing around with all the new toys time).
Hopefully it'll work out for him.
This website is great if you just wanna poke around at different types of Linux and see what you like best:
Instantly test run Linux distros online in the cloud for free, right from your web browser. No installation or live boot required.
And this (thank you again @balletinthestars) is the guide I used:
Securely store, share, and access your important files and photos. Anytime, anywhere.
Its made for Linux Mint but the process of downloading the Linux ISO and the program to put it in the flash-drive seems pretty universal.