The last version of Windows 11 is approaching the end of active support. 2035 is the year of Linux desktop!
The last version of Windows 11 is approaching the end of active support. 2035 is the year of Linux desktop!
I don’t. I’ll share this technology, preferably with trustworthy competent people. At last, I’ll probably figure out how that decision lead to my assassination.
I haven’t played it in a long time, but I always enjoyed Super Tux Kart. It reminded me more of the Moorhuhn / Crazy Chicken Kart games than Mario Kart. In general, before Steam Proton made Gaming on Linux almost free of any hassle, I spent more time with free and open source games like Nethack or Battle for Wesnoth that are available in many Linux package managers.
If I reduce it to the shows where I watched more than a few episodes:
I don’t consider that promotion. Think from the perspective of the people who happily use US big corpo social media. When you’re forced to consume B, because A is banned, you’re likely not giving B a fair chance, even if it would have otherwise convinced you.
(Obviously you must still enforce rules and ban the platforms that don’t abide.)
I’d tolerate it, but not support it. Forcefully taking them away gains these platforms even more support and demand. Only when people seek for alternatives or a change on their own, we can solve the problems.
It’s not an ideal situation, but somebody who you want to be kinder to themselves can motivate you to set an example.
The USA is neither the best country nor the worst country. It’s just one of the countries.
In Omori
Mari’s death and how it happened - I still feel pressure on my chest whenever I think about it. Since a missclick lead me accidentally to the alternative ending at first, it was even worse…
Contagion and Children of Men - while they didn’t look far into the future and dealt with existing problems, it’s still horrifyingly accurate.
That’s an interesting question. I’ll try to get to the bottom of this.
This is the kind of extreme solution I want to discover with a fitting search term. But personally, I still want to be able to fix bugs and update dependencies. I don’t want to lock down the project, but only the features.
Yup, but I struggle to find results about intentional usage of anti-patterns. I mean, it’s actually a good thing, but… :/
I don’t really have a perception of people that like to listen to metal, because that’s a huge amount of different people. This definitely did change. I’m not sure, if it was due to my younger age or the strength of genre stereotypes at the end of the 2000s, but at that time I didn’t even realize how much of the music I listened to was metal. I associated metal more with the stereotyped metal heads than the actual music.
Whether it’s 15 seconds, minutes or hours doesn’t matter, because they care about the decision that we make immediately.
I’m tired of seing the same superficial content everywhere in general. I just accept it and try to quickly scroll past them.
I don’t ignore, re-gift or discard any gifts, at least not immediately. But it’s extremely rare to satisfy me with a gift. It only happens when they know exactly what I’d have purchased myself in near future or if the person behind the gift means so much to me. Other than that, I prefer to not receive any gifts at all.
Every time I see the example of people used to Twitter complaining about Mastodon’s UX and UI, the experience of using the Twitter app and the constant struggle of figuring out whether the non-sense anomaly you see is a bug or just a feature to keep you locked in is becoming an even more painful memory…
I use it to order a powerbomb.