Driving is the most stressful thing many people do on a regular basis since one wrong move from you or somebody else can result in grievous injury or death.
Okay, but at least where I live, prices that increased due to covid haven't come back down. Supply is now high enough to satisfy demand, but prices aren't dropping. Of course, why would they? It turns out that customers have self-selected that they really don't want to starve or be homeless. Even if it wipes out most of their income.
I think Wipeout was probably the progenitor of this - the entire pitch of the game was basically "Futuristic racer set to techno bangers", and a lot of other games followed suit with their soundtracks.
I wouldn't say it's a strong opinion, but I've never seen a convincing argument that "inflation" (read "greedy bastards") wouldn't immediately wipe out the extra income - which would be very bad if the UBI were to replace other forms of welfare.
I tried paying for something off Facebook Marketplace over the internet rather than in-person. Of course I was scammed. Fortunately it was only for about $35.
It looks like you've fixed, it, but I'll share my 2c anyway:
Iso takes much longer to evaporate fully than it looks. Even though it's volatile, the texture of the build plate gives a lot of extra surface area for it to cling to. Because of this, I found that waiting overnight after cleaning with iso was a good idea. At least for me, this completely fixed my adhesion problems.
Stephanie Sterling (and not for the reason you probably think).
I understand that the gaming industry is shit, and therefore reporting on it is always going to skew negative, but it really felt to me like the negativity started permeating their content as a whole - to the point that I got the feeling that they didn't really enjoy video games at all anymore.
I also started to get the feeling that they resent their audience for responding positively to such negative content, too - doing things like complaining that the worst-of lists get more views than the best-of lists. You don't have to make them if you don't want to.
Also, it's cool that they found a passion, but I really don't care about wrestling.
This is admittedly anecdotal, but my experience with point releases is that things still break, and when they do, you're often stuck with the broken thing until a new release comes out. For this reason, among others, dist-upgrades tend to be extremely nervewracking.
With a rolling release, not only are fixes for broken things likely to release faster - if something does break, you can pin that package, and only that package, to an older version in the meantime. Then again, I've been using Arch almost exclusively on my desktop for about 7 years and I've never had to do this. I don't doubt that things have broken for people, but as far as I'm concerned, Arch just works.
As far as security goes, I don't think there's much, if any, advantage. Debian, the stablest of them all, still gets security updates in a timely fashion.
Is "must make the dumbest fucking decision possible at all times" in the Mozilla CEO job description or something?
I have no CEO experience, but I'll make stupid fucking decisions for a fifth of the salary you're paying the current guy.