Ignoring the AI going haywire for a bit - what is that feature request? I seriously can't wrap my head around it. What even is the point it's trying to make?
Yeah, I figured this out as a teenager. We had a half-marathon through rough terrain (gravel, sand, tree roots etc.). I had my 200€ bike from Facebook and a sports t-shirt from school. I felt very out of place with all these big men in their tight spandex suits and decked out bikes.
I passed most of them and finished 13th out of 130 (which is not amazing, but definitely not bad).
Liquorice is amazing. I once went to Godisfabriken in Sweden and came out with like 1.5kg of mixed liquorice, then proceeded to eat it all while hiking through the mountains in Norway. Good times.
That's a very valid point. I think it's more about the experience of going there with your friends, ordering popcorn etc.
I've been to the cinema alone, but that's usually only if I reeeally want to see the movie ASAP and it's not out anywhere else in the seven seas (if you know what I mean). Other than that it's always been about going there with friends. Kind of like music festivals - I enjoy them for every reason except the music part :D (with exceptions)
As someone in a city with tons and tons of commieblocks - the apartments are usually fine, but no, these areas almost always look like shit and are depressing to be around, regardless of the weather.
And this is not one random guy's opinion, no one I know likes these parts of the city and is excited to live there.
Yeah, this is a huge issue with Linux. It works out of the box, and usually in a much much better way than Windows. However, if you come across a small annoying issue, it can be either a breeze to fix with a simple command or a complete nightmare due to incompatibility issues.
I'm a professional software developer and IT technician, and have been for many years. And I still couldn't get my grandma's fucking printer to work on Ubuntu after 3 hours of debugging.
The good news is that the more people switch to Linux, use it, come across annoying issues and complain about them, the faster they get fixed and manufacturers develop their products with Linux in mind.
Or in some cases, like FOSS, the knowledge is freely available, but you pay for a detailed course or tutorial to receive that information in a simpler, more streamlined way.
I know this is fuckcars, but I personally I think it makes sense. Our brothers in Lithuania are also doing it (tbf there needs to be a specific sign next to the light saying you can do it).
The less people spend waiting on pointless traffic lights, the faster cars get to their destination, the less cars there are on the street. At least that's how I view it.
All of this is of course keeping in mind to always yield to a pedestrian.
Apparently I'm a "matchmaker" which is a fancy term for Tinder for rich people.