I use Wikipedia all the time as a news source, especially on topics mainstream gets bored of. Mostly ongoing trial stuff that takes months and months to get updates.
It's also great if you want background on a topic referenced in the news because it's like an archive of every event that lead up to the point
I hope you guys are right and most people use it that way, and some small instances it's kinda funny. But I fear the danger of being able to handwave away more important information as "it's weird how our brains do that!" instead of crap, I need to pay more attention. Maybe a case by case thing I dunno.
I thought the email explanation would help, but I've learned that the vast majority of people had someone help them make an email once a long ass time ago and haven't thought about it since. They maybe made a second one when they needed a serious job and were afraid everyone would judge SmokerToker69.
El Guapo had a moment of reflection about his misplaced anger, as explained to him by one of his henchmen. ICE are too stupid and emotionally sensitive to hang with El Guapo's crew.
Side note, I watched a video about how Mandela effect is maybe the most American concept ever. So many people kinda ignored/forgot that a guy won the Nobel Prize and was president of a major country for several years, or were never taught it because he's black. Even more couldn't be bothered to pay close enough attention to the spelling of a popular author's name (also foreign).
People would rather think that there is some supernatural mystic shared memory gap experience rather than believe we're idiots.
I love the grouped comments. I scroll through the comments on once instance, then I reach the next one and you can genuinely see the shift in priorities between communities. It's pretty cool
Trump could get on the mic and say he raped a bunch of kids and his cult would approve and value his honesty. A handful of right wing commentators are already testing the waters with "there's a difference between older kids and really young ones" kind of talk.
It's always weirded me that they have an open source browser with proprietary features attached. But I guess it makes sense if you know that disabling the proprietary stuff actually disables it, and I know I HAVE read that chromium itself is more secure than firefox
I had a moment of reflection last year about this. I told a coworker that my phone doesn't have service in the building and I refuse to get on company Wi-Fi with my personal device.
He explained that when he gets a new phone, he uses his old one as work only.
My brain hovered for a minute in "but the old one is broken do you get it fixed or something?" Before clicking in "oh, he buys a new phone before the old one goes bad"
My brain genuinely struggled with the concept. Maybe if he'd been a rich person it would have connected sooner. I dunno
If you check out one of those shops, they rotate through hundreds of different attempts that have failure or minor success throughout the year before one of the tik tok influencers gets it right and the sheep get in line, but not before trend vultures buy out the stock for their eBay scam
Are Moon Bottles good?
I've always been weirded out with straw+hot drink because every straw I've seen is plastic.
Moon Bottles looks like it's based on UK and meets all your needs and bonus the straw is metal. Various online reviews look good