ripley
I can't recommend a specific couch, but for what I call mid-range I think Costco is the place to go. They have lots of stuff online, but I wouldn't buy a couch I couldn't actually sit on first. In-store furniture is generally only available in between seasons though - the next time would be late summer. Oh, and there's no delivery from in-store - the last time I bought a couch I just rented a U-Haul for a few bucks.
I would have zero problems buying the straight digital product at a much more reasonable price if it were drm-free. Is it romantic to want to be able to use what I bought how I want without worrying my license can be revoked on a corporate whim?
It worries me when the Seattle Times can't even get the age of a famous local right.
I'm not the person you replied to, but what exactly did you intend individualist to mean in this context? When I look at individualism on Wikipedia, it seems to be a self-centered philosophy - 'Individualists promote realizing one's goals and desires, valuing independence and self-reliance, and advocating that the interests of the individual should gain precedence over the state or a social group, while opposing external interference upon one's own interests by society or institutions such as the government.'
Our choices regarding security and privacy are always compromises. The uneasy reality is that new tools can change the level of risk attached to our past choices. People may have been OK with others seeing their photos but aren't comfortable now that AI deep fakes are possible. But with more and more of our lives being conducted in this space, do even knowledgable people feel forced to engage regardless?
I don't think it's unreasonable to be uneasy with how technology is shifting the meaning of what public is. It used to be walking the dog meant my neighbors could see me on the sidewalk while I was walking. Now there are ring cameras, etc. recording my every movement and we've seen that abused in lots of different ways.
I just watched season one this year just before they actually confirmed season two. It would have been crazy to have watched it at the time of release - one of the most intense cliffhangers I've ever seen.
While I know that, I still interpreted this more generally as 'beware of his mouth' so it worked for me.
Regardless of whether you like Colbert/Stewart, I don't know how you can't find this absolutely chilling. It makes me think of Steven Fry's character in V for Vendetta.