I've been trying to google/amazon this and having basically no results, so I'm asking here in case anyone knows:
I need graph paper. Specifically I need LARGE graph paper. Like, not an A4 sheet, I need A1-A0 (24/33" or 33x46").
4x4 per inch, or 5x5 per inch grid spaces. I basically need a graph paper with a TON of squares, and I'm not finding it.
@foone If you can find a print shop specifically with a plan printer, they might do the trick. They're still out there, and they're often giant A1 width laser drums. They'll spit one out in seconds from a hardcopy, or a PDF.
Printers that service architectural places would have them. Modern ones are inkjets and a bit slower, but still doable.
@RL_Dane I remember seeing it with a tiny vaio sitting on the keyboard, it was a ridiculous comparison.
Still I would want it. I want huge screens, and huge ones around me often. I have no problem carrying them and honestly if a 27" iMac was just a touch more compact a portable I might portable it with me everywhere.
Last boost ('just think your iPad settings') poses an interesting and thankfully hypothetical question (for now). When Apple products can literally read our minds, people with ADHD are going to be in real trouble. Perhaps the devices will be able to sense our sentiments by reading our microexpressions, or the iGoggles will come with a built-in EEG pickup. But good luck to an Apple NPU trying to make any sense of my train of thought, though.
@engagedpractx ahahahha. I had not thought of this. My own internal feedback of thoughts on thoughts on whatever is bad enough imagine a confused Siri going wtf
1989's Macintosh SE/30L is remembered as one of Apple's biggest flops. MacWorld criticised its rotated L display as "...bringing all of the issues and none of the benefits of a true L display", while MacWeek called it "Some kind of deranged P display nobody asked for".
Have you ever stopped listening to or trusting a person who posts information in media, or online because of a "red flag" ?
That is are there certain topics, habits, actions etc. that instantly decrease your trust in a person you might have otherwise listened to on a podcast, article, or video?