Herzlich Willkommen auf meinem Blog. Ich poste hier Rezensionen zu Büchern, die ich gelesen habe.
Ich hoffe sie gefallen euch und ihr könnt vielleicht neuen Lesestoff für euch entdecken!
Analog tools (paper, pencil, books) are not obsolete. They help you think when digital feedback fails. Day 10 – The First Start Engine in. Bolts tight. Wires correct. Fuel line connected (he’d forgotten — fuel pump whined dry for an hour before he noticed). Battery charged using the tractor alternator trick.
The 32-bit engine sound stuttered — a loop of a real Datsun starting, compressed to 22 seconds, repeating with a click. Smoke particles (four white squares) rose from the exhaust. The RPM gauge flickered from 0 to 900. my summer car 32 bit
And that summer, that was enough.
Here’s a useful story that blends the quirky, punishing world of My Summer Car (the famously detailed Finnish car-building simulator) with a 32-bit demake twist — and offers a practical lesson about patience, problem-solving, and embracing limitations. Jussi had three months, a rusted 1974 Datsun 100A, and a copy of My Summer Car that ran on his dad’s old Pentium II. Not the modern version — the mythical, half-remembered 32-bit edition , passed around on burned CDs with a handwritten label: Kesäni Auto (32-bit) . Analog tools (paper, pencil, books) are not obsolete
No highlighting. No drag-and-drop. You had to click each wire end, then click a component. If wrong, the wire disappeared — lost forever unless you bought more from Teimo’s for 100 mk. Bolts tight