Tfw your femurs have erectile dysfunction after taking estrogen.
RobotZap10000
FTL is great. It'll probably run on a toaster. I've also heard that it has a bajillion great mods to play if you get tired of the base game
I'll caution against nextcloud [...]
It is indeed rather big and clunky sometimes, but there's one feature that I really love that I could not really live without. I just tried out Seafile, but I didn't like the whole "libraries" concept, because it made it very difficult to exclude certain subfolders that I didn't want on a certain system or to sync multiple local folders to multiple remote folders. I'm using Nextcloud to sync my Documents, Videos, Pictures and Music folders across all of my devices, but I don't need every single subfolder there downloaded to every single device that I use it on. I also use it to sometimes sync game save files for the ones that I don't have on Steam. Would you happen to know a better solution than Nextcloud for something like this? I'm currently migrating it from a Raspberry Pi 2 to an older laptop that I have laying around, and I'd happily use a different syncing solution for this, and set up other features that I used (CalDAV, CardDAV) on other containers.
P.S Syncthing looks like what I might need, but I do wonder how I can make public share/upload links with it.
Very cute, very derpy!
4channer try not be bigoted for 1 nanosecond challenge (IMPOSSIBLE) (GONE SEXUAL)
нахуй блять
In short:
The complaint accuses the initiative of "systemic concealment of major contribution," violating EU stipulations requiring citizens to report any sponsor contributions over €500.
The complaint cites PC Gamer's interview with Scott from June, in which he said "there have been many weeks on the campaign where I've been working 12 to 14 hours a day to keep things moving to get signatures." That promotional work, the complaint argues, amounts to "€63,000-147,000 in professional contribution" if he'd charged a "market rate" of "€50-75/hour."
It's also not how the EU's disclosure requirements work. As Scott notes in the video, the EU's citizens' initiative rules say that "individuals providing non-financial support, such as volunteering, are not considered sponsors under the ECI Regulation and do not need to be reported."
If the petition heads to the Commission after its petition deadline on July 31, we can expect to see even more exciting rhetorical maneuvers.
I sure hope that the EU can withstand these 4D chess 900 IQ rhetorical maneuvers.
That's certainly the truth and I agree with you fully, but I just wanted to remind people that not being on the web all the time/terminally online might make you feel a bit better. I believe that some people might be so far up Plato's cave (read: Zuck's rectum) that they simply might not understand how the technology that they use is actively hostile to them. Your words will land much better on people who have noticed that they are indeed living in the midst of shit, and I think that regularly going outside is the first step of that.
Fahrenheit 451 moment
Go outside. Touch some grass. Leave your phone at home. Do this every day. There's still an entire world out there, with far more pleasant surprises than you might assume or could even imagine. You can do this. The internet can be a wonderful resource when not abused, but it is in and of itself not a way of life. It may bring you entertainment and knowledge, but only using it won't bring you the joy and satisfaction that you desire in your life. That will be found elsewhere, oftentimes beyond the screen. Don't listen to those fat snakes in Silicon Valley that peddle their Facebook/Tinder/LinkedIn but for horses as the one and only way to achieve and get ahead in life these days. They only want you to believe that so that you will get hooked on their ad-revenue machine. You can live your life to the fullest just fine without them.
You can pirate 'em if you're that short on cash. Most of them don't cost too much more than €20. 0 AD is entirely free, along with all of the Super Tux games.