

I mean they fired the guy, and the guy took full responsibility for the errors. If that’s not blaming the journalist, I don’t know what is.


I mean they fired the guy, and the guy took full responsibility for the errors. If that’s not blaming the journalist, I don’t know what is.
I use a memory foam pillow. There is nothing to fluff.


Just a Windows PC. On certain days, Bluetooth just decides not to work.


I downloaded it the other night but I couldn’t get my Bluetooth controller to connect. I’ll have to remember to give it a try again.


I saw a video of a 3-year-old kid doing it, and I figured I’m at least as smart as a baby.


That’s like asking why not try making an email blacklist of spammers. A bot can make accounts faster than any humans can keep up. You need other methods to handle the problem.


Just find channels you like and subscribe to them. Anything else is a losing battle.


I went around 2018. Did some research first to determine when was a good time to go to avoid crowds. Spent over a week there, and while some areas and days were quite crowded, it didn’t really detract much from the experience, and I still got to enjoy large areas of the park with barely any other humans around.


Most national parks. Especially Yellowstone is amazing.


Right? Imagine if you were to come into the comments and there are 50 comments but you can only read them 10 at a time.
Yt-dlp. I’ve used it for years, no problems. You can find guis for it if you don’t want to use command line.


Another article personifying an LLM as if it actually has intelligence and awareness.
It’s simultaneously awesome and overhyped.


I never really hated my job or anything, and before COVID we even had an option to work from home one day a week, but I never bothered with it. But when I went to working from home full time, my quality of life improved significantly. Just driving to work used to be the most stressful part of my day, and eliminating that makes me so much happier. Not having to constantly “look busy” is also huge. As long as I get my work done my boss is happy. I also used to have bad neck and back pain which went away when I started work from home. Even though we have supposedly “ergonomic” setups at work, I guess something about it wasn’t working for my body. I love working from home so much now that I would more readily accept a pay cut than to have to go back to the office.


VR has given us an incredible amount of funny videos where the user will decide to run full speed into a wall or something. That and “hoverboards” have kept America’s Funniest Home Videos on the air.
When did Firefox take away a choice that was previously offered?


Brushing your teeth takes 2 minutes. They tell you to spend a whole 30 minutes a day working out. 30 minutes of boredom, discomfort, pain and agony.


I played PC games since the early 90s, so I am well familiar with how things used to be before steam. And it was fine. I was hesitant to use steam at first, because like you say, I simply didn’t understand the point of it. Sometime after Valve released the orange box, that ended up being the first thing I bought on steam. And back then, some of the first things that I noticed about it was the ease of installing games, and the friends list that let me talk to and play games with my friends. I ended up getting really into team fortress 2, largely because I could play with people I knew, and we could even chat outside the game easily. It was easy to buy other games that these same friends were playing, and then enjoy a different game with them.
I got used to steam and it began to feel convenient, and at the same time, physical media started dying off. Steam let me easily install and uninstall any of my games whenever I wanted. I didn’t have to keep track of any physical media. I don’t have any of my old PC games from the 90s anymore. I have no idea where there went or how I lost them. But they are just gone. However, I still have every game I’ve ever bought on steam.
I’m not a heavy gamer anymore. If I see something I want, it’s easy to just put it on my wishlist and wait until it goes on sale at a price I think is reasonable. If I feel bored, I might open up my full list of games and browse for something to install. My game saves get backed up to the cloud. My controllers just work. Everything related to the gaming experience is integrated into one place, and I like that, it makes it easy. And for the most part, steam kind of just stays out of my way.
If you access something through an app rather than a web browser, the only way to get the url may be through the share button.