We can’t see his feet, but there’s a 99% chance he’s wearing a pair of filthy sandals with way too many miles on them.
We can’t see his feet, but there’s a 99% chance he’s wearing a pair of filthy sandals with way too many miles on them.
I was hoping to find ProZD in here!
“You look just like dad. And that’s very disappointing.”
I like Bernie’s idea of taxing every trade on the stock market.
I agree with your sentiment and I have definitely grown and my opinions have changed from the influence of people I have “met” online over the decades. However, none of the people who influenced me in positive ways were trolls, jerks, or snarky smart-asses. I really don’t think anything is lost if you block a lot of those type of people. I actually think something is gained. The amount of time and energy we are allotted to spend in this life are precious.
It’s a good tool and I encourage people to use it. Otherwise the asshole filter can start to take over. I’d honestly prefer someone to block me if I annoy them, rather than try to engage me in some snark-fest or pointless argument.
I also think it’s best just to block and move on if someone acts like a jerk. Don’t respond or tell them you are blocking them. Let them shout into the void.
One of the main things I look for is the person’s comment history. If they seldom post an original thought or comment and mostly reply just to be nasty and condescending towards other people, I will block them. They are basically using the people in forums as a bunch of paper targets to snipe at. Once you know to look for them, you can spot these type of commenters pretty quickly.
In highly controversial threads I will often spot new people to block that I did not even engage with.
They make use it at my job. I hate it.
Now I’m hoping my Nighthawk router lasts for several more years.
Sorry about that, I did not know that was the case with them. Maybe LG has aggressive lawyers?
You can advertise without paying millions to people who already have millions. And forcing them to reveal the cost to consumers isn’t preventing them from advertising.
I’ve been impressed with Fastmail. I also use Tuta, which is pretty cool (but I barely use it).
Some potential places to hunt around in and/or ask in the forums:
We use both Azure and AWS at work. Azure is less expensive. But it’s also like comparing a corner 7-11 to a city-sized shopping mall. AWS is freaking huge and they add new services every week it seems. It’s kind of overwhelming.
There’s also Google Cloud and IBM and Oracle but they all suck for the same reasons AWS and Azure suck.
You might want to look into Alibaba Cloud, Digital Ocean, and/or Linode/Akamai.
An “optics first” mindset. Sadly, it’s probably even worse in 2024.
I’m 80% there. I think the “constant push notifications” software trend accelerated it quite a bit.
I don’t know shit about knitting, and even I can tell the needles are upside-down just for starters.
I totally get that.
Check out Textpad. You might like it. The only nuisance with it is the default config settings are a little oddball (things like keyboard shortcuts, etc). But it’s highly configurable so you can set it up the way you like and then it’s good. It has more features than Notepad, but it’s still pretty simple and can do cool things like search files / folders for strings, has regex support, etc. But the extras stay out of your way and it’s pretty clean and simple for “notepad-like” usage.
I was good at math until Cal III when I hit the wall. I’ve forgotten almost all of what I learned, though. So I’m not really good at math anymore. Unless you enter certain career paths, most people won’t need to use advanced math in their day-to-day. I bet you’re good at some non-math stuff.
Pandainfuls