Yes. I am among the number that prefers it the way it is.
Yes. I am among the number that prefers it the way it is.
It could absolutely be implemented by Sync.
SD slots aren’t all that uncommon still.
I don’t know, man, it’s just like… the way that it is.
Was this written by AI?
Did you read the article? The guy almost killed himself from having to listen to comments like this one. Asshole. Keep it to yourself.
I appreciate you honestly giving your opinion when it conflicts with the popular sentiment, and I don’t think you should be downvoted for that.
But this is such a shit take, wtf.
…Limit?
Rekindle old friendships. Every time you do something together, plant a seed for the next thing you’re going to do. Meet new people through them. If you like the people, don’t say no to anything you’re invited to. Rinse, repeat.
Well, my story isn’t particularly interesting, but I imagine it’s similar to many others’.
I used RIF. Reddit killed RIF. I wasn’t a fan of how they handled that at all, and it instantly soured me against the company. Also, their own app is terrible.
I browsed /r/RedditAlternatives for answers, and tried a few. Lemmy felt most like what I enjoyed about Reddit, and it wasn’t totally devoid of content. I figured out how instances worked, picked a random one, thinking I’d choose my favorite later, and started posting a comment here and there. I tried a bunch of apps, moved from Beehaw to lemmy.world, found communities that I liked, and… well here we are.
I’ll admit, I’ve visited Reddit a few times when Lemmy has felt stale, but mostly I’ve completely moved over without missing it. The vibe is much better, like early Reddit, despite having less content. I’ve felt compelled to contribute more often myself, which makes it more fun.
Æon Flux, from 2005. 9% on RT. I’m not sure if it’s nostalgia from seeing it as a teen or if the masses weren’t ready for it or what, but it was just so unique and had such a cool vibe.
I’ve been there! Impossible to get a photo without any people in it, but so beautiful. We also visited a perfume factory nearby, which was way cooler than I would’ve expected.
Wait wait wait. Stop everything. I’ve found my post.
I too was like you. Every flimsy-ass can opener I had ever used couldn’t puncture cans consistently, would get off track, leave uncut sections, and just generally suck completely. I got so fed up replacing them that I went off the deep end researching these things.
My wife got impatient with me. She told me to come back to bed; that can openers weren’t this important. That didn’t stop me. I was going to put an end to the suck. I read review sites, I visited stores, I called people. After literal days of research, I made my decision.
A can opener doesn’t need to be complicated or decked out with fancy features. Fundamentally, the qualities you want are reliability, comfort, build quality, and leverage (i.e. a powerful mechanical advantage).
I didn’t buy the OXO. Not a side-cutter (don’t get me started). I bought the EZ-Duz-It can opener—an unassuming name for the most brilliant can opener ever built.
It’s inexpensive and durable. It securely latches onto cans and glides through them with ease. The knob spins smoothly with little effort. This thing is a dream. Never before have I experienced such a drastic shift in how I felt about a product.
There simply is no other answer.
That’s sad, but comforting in a way.
Just do what my colleagues do, ignore it completely.
Pros: Very time and resource efficient. Little documentation needed.
Cons: Doesn’t solve the problem.
That, and just mention it in the comments of other posts when it’s contextually appropriate.
In our office, any time someone leaves their screen unlocked, we turn everything upside down in the display settings. Good way to remind people to Win + L when they get up. 😆
I named my cat Craig to intentionally capitalize on this effect. I think it’s funny, even if no one else does.
I came here to post this. Glad to see it’s where it needs to be.