▲ 2 r/Ubuntu

Can't access BIOS or dual boot screen

Hi, I've tried many things (Pressing F2, F11, F12, DEL, commenting grub timeout and running systemctl reboot --firmware- or whatever it's called), but can't boot into BIOS. That means I can't reisntall my OS either.

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u/WaidmannsHeil05 — 21 hours ago

Hi, I would appreciate some honest critique of my gesture drawings

I started doing this 3 days ago after watching proko's video. These are all 120-90 seconds.

u/WaidmannsHeil05 — 2 days ago
▲ 1 r/UniRO

Eliberare diplomba bac temporar

Stie cineva procesul? Am nevoie ca sa ma inscriu la o a 2a facultate in parale, la fmi ub. Cat dureaza procesul? Ar trebui sa ma astept sa dificultati si piedici?

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u/WaidmannsHeil05 — 3 days ago
▲ 1 r/UniRO

Inscriere la taxa UTCB

Buna, eu sunt deja la o facultate in cadrul UB. Pe site ul UTCB spune ca trebuie sa depun in original actele, inclusiv diploma de bac. Pot depune o copie? E nevoie macar sa o depun daca sunt la taxa?

P.S. Intreb aici pentru ca inchis la secretariat pana luni. Vreau sa am timp sa merg la Bucuresti in caz ca e nevoie.

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u/WaidmannsHeil05 — 3 days ago

Please help me figure out contradicting advice

Hello everyone, I hope this post doesn't break any rules.

For the past year, I've been trying to get into drawing. I drew as a kid and I really want to draw now. My issues is that all the advice I see from posts off of this subreddit, as well as other sources and IRL advice have been very contradicting.

For reference, I want to be able to draw people, poses, faces and buildings. Lots of people told me to start with drawing boxes and advance through some sort of organized series of steps which, despite being pretty boring, I'm totally willing to do. However, I've just as often been told to just draw and bother with the very very basics, since I'll pick those up as I go and they aren't as necessary at first and it is crucial to just draw and get in the habit of drawing. So I started doing that for a while, but then I've been told that I can't just draw because I'll be learning things wrong (since I don't know the fundamentals).

There's so much more stuff I've heard, especially related to drawing faces and many techniques that only seem to get more complicated the more you read into an online thread, but I'll spare you the details.

I'm totally aware that there isn't a perfect roadmap to follow, but I have learned other skills, especially related to musical instruments and I can very clearly imagine a roadmap one would be able to follow to get decent and be able to LEARN better, not just BE better.

So my question is, am I reading into this too much? Is this a case of analysis paralysis? Please help I'm very confused LOL

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u/WaidmannsHeil05 — 6 days ago

Should my 2 hands play independently?

Hello everyone!

Every time I learn a new piece, I follow the same process:

  1. Learn the right hand
  2. Learn the left hand
  3. Combine the 2 by seeing where they do and don't intersect

My issue is that I don't know if this is a proper way of learning music. Should my 2 hands both "play" at the same time and sync up because I'm playing the proper rythm at the proper tempo or is it ok for them to do so because I know that the notes I'm playing at a certain moment should come in at the same time from both hands?

I've noticed this now, while learning Hungarian Dance by Hugo Reinhold (Sheet).

In the beginning, the left hand follows a very nice and easy to play pattern with (almost) the same 3 notes for about 2 measures. Should I almost play it "braindead" and let play the right hand melody over it, almost as if my left hand is a backing track, or keep my method of knowing when the 2 hands intersect? I find it difficult to play the former, but I'm afraid it might be the proper technique.

u/WaidmannsHeil05 — 2 months ago

Should I follow the RC syllabus?

Hello everyone,

I have been playing piano for about 7 years, 6 of which with a teacher, but in a very casual way. I never spent enough time practicing at home, never learned to sight or read a piece while playing it (meaning I have to memorize everything and rely on muscle memory).

That being said, I want to start playing more seriously and learning more pieces, I can currently play fairly well pieces such as Shostakovich Waltz No.2, Chopin - Waltz in A Minor, Prelude in E minor, Satie - Gnossienne No. 1 and other fairly simple pieces (I feel like i need to mention this: I haven't, by any means, played these perfectly or maybe even great. I never got the criticism of the caliber people r/piano tend to give).

Would it a good idea to pick something I want to play and work at it ( Chopin - Waltz Op. 69 No. 2 in B minor, Tchaikovsky - Valse Sentimentale just of the top of my head) or go through the Royal Conservatory syllabus and play 2-3 pieces from each level in order to make sure I fill all my gaps. Would 2-3 pieces/level even suffice?

Thank you

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u/WaidmannsHeil05 — 2 months ago