I've had a bad time with just one display at work after having two for so long at home and while in college. It really is very useful, even if only for having a stream or show on one while being able to post stuff like this on the other (but it's not only for that).
That was the biggest pain in the ass when I'd be forced to only use my laptop. Only having one screen was so shitty.
When I moved and my third monitor kicked the bucket I thought I'd be fine with just two 1080p monitors. But really I want one dedicated for streaming videos and such, one as my primary, and a secondary one for webpages and bots and stuff
How does our brain know when to use your vs you're when we aren't thinking about it? Is our brain able to realize the context so we don't even have to think about it?
i believe it's intuitive for anyone with decent writing skills and good awareness. i occasionally substitute words for their homophones by mistake, but it's pretty rare.
for people who often make those kind of mistakes, i wonder if it's a difference in the way their brain works or they simply aren't as careful when writing.
I'm pretty sure for the vast majority they could be "taught" with enough practice, but how much practice it would take would totally depend on the person. People learn differently etc etc.
hah yeah school dreams seem to be only ones i have anymore. it's like my brain took a specific concern i had during an important part of my life (missing a class) and just keeps turning it over and over
yeah very similar for me I think, guilt for not really making the most of my time at university
last night's was a super clusterfuck though, involved this girl I've not seen for years and then it ended up with a load of wasps' nests appearing in my house for no reason