

And you don’t even need to do that. Press “Reject all and subscribe” and then go back in your browser.
And you don’t even need to do that. Press “Reject all and subscribe” and then go back in your browser.
I’ve tried it. Can’t really see much difference from not using it. As others have said, being a personal user you’re not much of a target - being smart about what you run on your computer has much more of an effect on security.
In the future I probably won’t bother
I found a personal tutor and I spend an hour with them every week (online). Outside of that I watch YouTube videos (with English subtitles) and practice with friends who I have who know the language too. I have tried Memrise, Duolingo and others in the past and I have made considerably more progress this way.
Basically: find someone who can actually make sure you’re getting something from it and find a good way to practice too
I have an original reMarkable (not the 2) and whilst it’s a but slow for big fancy scanned PDFs it is generally pretty good for what I want. It does also run linux so you can ssh into it and do everything locally away from their cloud services which is nice
It makes me sad when I see the name because Kagi used to be a payments processor for shareware and essentially a predecessor to modern app stores…but before enshittification.
This isn’t just Denmark. And businesses often host events with them: https://humanlibrary.org/
When the real crime is that being a US KitKat the chocolate is awful.
The Polish word pierdolić “to fuck” is so versatile there exists this excellent reference resource: https://pierdology.webflow.io/
Found the American
I love when I get halfway through an old usenet thread before I realise the date the messages were posted
remove shoes, belt, put laptop/phone on the tray bins
Some airports are removing this requirement now, but there are usually signs
Notch. I don’t think there is any damage. It just seems to ”let go” whilst dragging much too easily
I recently got a (second hand) M1 MacBook Pro and the trackpad is surprisingly awful Compared to the last MacBook I had (a 2012 rMBP). I find it very awkward to drag things for some reason. I wonder if I am perhaps ”doing it wrong”
If you are a big company there are often ESCROW agreements for things like this. I have encountered the “data dumps” from time to time and whilst it’s “better” it’s not ideal. Half finished documentarian, virtual machines of mis-configured OS installs… it’s almost as if it was just a straight copy of the development environment as it was just as they made the final version of the software…
But it’s better than nothing.
Main issue I can see with this forcing open source would be libraries and frameworks licensed from others who would likely still be in business and wouldn’t agree to those parts becoming open sourced. See also WinAMP https://www.theregister.com/2024/10/16/opensourcing_of_winamp_goes_badly/
If you still have a land line you can dial locally without even an area code. This worked in most countries. Some mobile phone networks kept this tradition although in a weirder way: you could dial locally when physically located in those areas, and your phone would display the area code you were in on the its standby screen. Which worked as long as you weren’t on a border between cells and it picked the wrong one.
Over time this went away.
I don’t think this is what you have experienced, but it was a nice thing that blurred the lines between land line and mobile phones for a little while, and I think it’s interesting.
Ah hah hah
I go and look up the place I am searching for on Google Maps, see if it has a direct website / ordering system and always prioritise going direct if I can. Many now do, and by and large they have lower fees / lower minimum values since they don’t pay such a high premium for the platform.
Phoenix Wright?
I don’t know why you would want to do that? Just drink less beer?