Uh … yeah, it’s his livelihood. He writes books on programming with Apple machines. Of course he’s still going to do the things he’s been doing his whole life.
partner I possibly could have had. He let me explore and do things on my own and when I got stuck, he would chirp with the right direction. He had special robes so I knew he knew everything and was just my Sherpa, and we could talk without talking. I had to use the restroom so I made two circles and chirped, and he chirped and stopped moving. He stood up when I came back and we were on our way. My partner had the worst experience… first partner disconnected after ten minutes. Restarted. Second partner was a speedrunner. Third partner disconnected before the final climb. No more partner. I was very sad for them.
I’ve had a good experience with my Apple Watch. It’s the first model that ever came out and it’s almost a decade old. The battery lasts only 75% of a day now but I think ten years is a good life for it.
My gay(er than me) friend corrected me when I said “switch” and let me know “vers” is more common now, but I had never heard that before recently! I’m extremely vers.
Thank you for the link, I was lazy. I heavily recommend it, the host has on a lady who is an “expert in trigger warnings” (like a legit expert) and her research is very enlightening. I can relate—when I was young, I would deliberately seek out things with trigger warnings that I knew would affect me because it felt good to look at those things! I still click on anything with warnings, but I don’t actively seek stuff out anymore cuz I’m lazy.
There’s an episode of the excellent podcast “Search Engine” about this, it’s called “What do trigger warnings actually do?” and it brought me from the “maybe they’re effective” thought group to the “they are not effective” group.
Almost 40, 20 point gang
I’ve used heaps of typewriters. My mum had an antique one when I was growing up that still worked and I loved it.