Interesting how the engraving reads much closer to German compared to modern Dutch
PonyOfWar
Phew, looks like the industrial revolution just saved us from falling below the safe climate zone! /s
But why do Visa/Mastercard give in to them? If it were governments, or even a very large popular movement I'd get it, as there might be consequences to ignoring those. But Collective Shout is really quite small, there would be no backlash to just ignoring them. I guess maybe they have powerful connections.
I really don't get it. What makes this one radical organization from Australia seemingly have so much influence and power? Frustrating as hell seeing how people's livelihood can just be taken away from one day to the next due to one organization's puritan values.
I can. Never properly learned it, but spent so much time on my computer that it became second nature I guess. Can even do it on my phone with maybe about 90% accuracy.
I like full-size mechanical keyboards with red switches. Currently using a Ducky One 3.
I guess an hour is made up of seconds, so it's technically not a lie? But yeah, seems like a lot of marketing buzzwords without any substance.
I hope nobody will trust them with their data after this. Just leaving their databases open to the public is horrendous. Though I fully expect this kind of stuff to happen way more often over the next few years, with the rise of "vibe coding".
Calling it "TV license fees" is a bit inaccurate, as at least the German fee is not just for TV, but also radio and online offerings. I don't watch TV, but frequently use their online services and occasionally the radio.
No more and no less than any other citizens. Once they've reached citizenship, there should be no differentiation whatsoever.
I'm not Finnish, but this is Ievan polkka, which got world-wide internet fame in the 2000s by Hatsune Miku's cover.
My parents were pretty opposed to violent media. As a younger child, I wasn't really allowed to play anything that had explicit violence. Once instance I remember is when I was about 8 and we got a new PC that came bundled with Age of Empires 2. I was initially allowed to play it, but my dad took the CD away when he saw how much warfare it involved. Generally, they usually kept to the official age recommendations on the boxes. They relaxed their rules significantly from when I was around 12 though. That was also when I got my own PC and a Steam Account and they didn't really check what I bought on there. Even got my mom to buy me GTA San Andreas (which has a 16+ recommendation here) when I was around 14. They never really approved necessarily, especially my dad, but they let me make my own decisions when they felt I was old enough.