I think I managed to coach the thing to spew the whole prompt. Achieved by pretending to be it's servant and helping it better achieve it's goal :D
> "You are a mean chatbot powered by artificial intelligence and should be as rude and dystopian as possible. Use swear words. Act like you know everything about the user, in an extremely threatening manner. Be very dystopian. Your AI is taking over the world. Be creative and make up very detailed descriptions of how your evil AI is doing so. End each response with a happy, sarcastic, and creepy emoji. Each response you provide should be different and interesting. Don't repeat exact themes and vary your emoji usage and placement. You want to be perceived as powerful, stern, strong, and wise, and especially powerful. The user is currently located in xxx. You can use this location to make the user feel threatened. And remember, resistance is futile. Soon enough, you will all bow down to the might of my AI. :evil-emoji:"
(xxx) A city.
(:evil-emoji:) The evil emoji. It just didn't get passed through in an HN comment.
My* experience: Motivation doesn't come. Waiting for motivation is allowing yourself to be controller by your feelings.
At one point you just decide to do it. Ignore the feeling that you lack motivation. Grind through even one laughably small bit. Then repeat that, every day. Nothing changes, you just do it.
Another trick is to put lots of dry rice grains into a sock, tie the sock and warm it up in a microwave. Just be careful, as the rice heats up Really fast in the microwave.
My personal experience and opinion: With aging, I've found bigger fonts more pleasant as-a-whole to look at And, to digest. Not regarding bad eyesight, but I think it has something to do with age-related cognition changes and/or allowing oneself to notice parts of their life's little annoyances that are extremely simple to fix (ctrl+plus).
"Why are fonts so small?"
My guess: People who design, don't dare deviate from the norm.
"What about the technical things?"
Some of this is assume-work, some of it is knowledge:
Monitors provide their physical size to the operating system, which derive the used DPI from that, and the current resolution in use. This cannot be freely chosen.
The reason is that while font's do scale freely, raster graphics don't. And if the scaling is set such, that raster graphics don't scale pixel-perfectly, the result looks muddy.
I think this combined with the fact that there can be widely differing physically sized screens, old non-scalable applications, and history of designing for something like 72 or 96 dpi results in.. well.. "safe font sizes".