u/RicardoDawson

Image 1 — Neo65 Core Plus: not sure about the keycaps…
Image 2 — Neo65 Core Plus: not sure about the keycaps…
Image 3 — Neo65 Core Plus: not sure about the keycaps…
Image 4 — Neo65 Core Plus: not sure about the keycaps…

Neo65 Core Plus: not sure about the keycaps…

I love the overall look of these PBTfans Virtuoso keycaps on my desk. The silver Neo65 and clean keycaps go well with the iMac and accessories. But, they have some issues for me:

- They are very smooth and I would prefer some texture.
- Maybe because of the smoothness, they tend to pick dirt very easily. They end up looking grimy pretty fast.
- They are dye-sub PBT and I wrongly assumed they were double-shot. My bad here. The thing is, even though they sound nice and clean (better than some other PBT keycaps I have) I know they won't allow the full potential of my Neo65 clacky build.

So… even though these weren't cheap and I really wanted to use them, I think I'll be looking for alternatives.

u/RicardoDawson — 1 day ago

Everything ready for my final build!

My Neo65 Core Plus finally arrived and I'm pretty excited to start building but I'm not rushing it.

I started in the hobby about a year and a half ago and I feel that this board will be my endgame. Yeah, I said it!

u/RicardoDawson — 3 days ago

Conceptual question about black holes, time dilation and information preservation

Newbie here (and english is not my native language so please bear with me) but i have a question.

We don’t know what happens inside a black hole and we call it a singularity because our mathematics are incomplete and unable to explain yet.

We know about time relativity and time dilation, which mean that time near a black hole elapses differently relative to someone far way, for example on Earth. 1 second near a black hole might mean 1 whole year to someone far away.

We also know that the information preservation theory means that black holes shouldn’t be destroying matter.

So, here’s my question: could it be that black holes don’t “destroy” information but, because of time dilation, we’re not able to yet see the effects of the singularity, the same way a blind man cannot perceive a big explosion until the sound wave reaches him, moments after the light from that event reaches him?

So, doing another stupid analogy, could the supermassive black holes inside the center of each galaxy be like the “biggest fireworks in history” to a blind man, and they have already exploded (releasing the matter they “ingested”) but the sound effect (in this case, spacetime effect) hasn’t still reached us?

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u/RicardoDawson — 2 months ago