Get wrecked, assholes. Solving real problems can't be done with high and mighty, off the cuff promises. If you were this gullible, maybe grow as a person and become more engaged with people who actually understand problems rather than disengaged because your scammer scammed you.
smeg
I'm always in favor of providing a sentence or two at the beginning of a guide explaining what the thing is being installed, unless the thing is so obvious that everyone in the broader community already knows what it is. If you only assume that people who already know what the thing is will be interested in your guide, then you've significantly limited your audience.
For those who also didn't know what Fluxer is: it's a Discord/Slack alternative chat app
So it makes taxes look huge while not at all accounting for corporate profits. Typical corporate media propaganda.
Tax it out of existence. It's bad for everyone and everything.
Sea of Stars. If you play for too long, it can be repetitive and grindy. But in small sessions it's charming and fun.
When business travelers and wealthy tourists start to really be inconvenienced, Democrats will cave on any policy stance.
Counterpoint: I think it's reasonable to inform people of what a dev team allows into their project, or how they're directing the development of the product.
For some people, it will be a hard no. Others maybe don't mind AI interoperability if it's not in the codebase itself. Others won't mind if the app is critical to their workflow, but may reject apps that are less critical. Others don't care at all.
I look at it like the Denuvo labeling curator on Steam. Nothing wrong in informing people.
The US never delivers on promises. Iraqis who were promised US relocation mostly had the offers reneged on, or were later kicked out.
OSM is a free, nonprofit map database
- My VPS providers. Ramnode and Contabo.
- Kagi Search
- Wikipedia (donation)
- Newsgroup Ninja and NZBGeek.
- Bitwarden
- Tossable Digits - hold and virtually use my US number while I live abroad
I just want a conventional desktop paradigm that feels relatively integrated. For almost a decade I used Cinnamon until I found myself really wanting Wayland. For the past 5 years or so, I have used GNOME. It's clean, and with a few tweaks it meets my needs.
I always preferred metric and Celsius. When I lived in South Korea, I was able to adapt immediately. Now I live in Europe and it makes all of the conversions easier.
Americans resistant to metric, in my opinion, are not very smart.