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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)F
Posts
89
Comments
219
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I'm fine with this, particularly since you can just tick the box and still access them. Linux Mint is such a good gateway for new Linux users, it makes sense to hide unverified flatpaks until they understand the risks. Plenty of people (perhaps myself included) won't ever need to worry about unverified flatpacks if their needs are simple and they don't add much beyond the standard software.

  • Return on investment is still heavily in favor of solar or wind generation with battery or hydro storage for low generation periods.

  • In a similar vein, Joe Biden, who signed the TikTok ban into law, had already joined TikTok.

    Let's face it, the U.S. has not been consistent with respect to foreign-owned social media companies, and what it really needs to do is pass meaningful privacy protections. Instead, you get this nonsense.

  • National Tea Appreciation Day, anyone?

  • How much of the increased price of fast food is because restaurants have to pay workers more than $7.25/hour now? It seems like the entire business model of cheap fast food was premised on low-quality food and labor costs so low that most fast-food workers qualified for public assistance. Leaving aside the low-quality oligarchical food product industry and just looking at the labor side, it's still a failure. And a business model that relies on food stamps and welfare for its employees really isn't a business model.

  • Yes please!

  • Housing was out of reach for many Americans before interest rates went up. I don't think allowing an escape to mortgage rate lock-in is a bad idea, but state and municipal funding and financing and zoning reform would make more of a difference in the housing market.

  • Melinda > Bill

  • I don't love the consolidation in this industry, but I know the big draw was the spectrum US Cellular holds.

  • Pretty sick and tired of so-called clean aviation fuel efforts. Just build the damn high-speed rail already, knock out most of the domestic air travel, and limit flights to trips that couldn't be done by train. That requires zero new tech and would make WAY more of an impact on greenhouse gas emissions than hydrogen jets ever could.

  • Deleted

    deleted by creator

    Jump
  • tab grouping

    Sure, okay.

    vertical tabs

    To each their own.

    profile management

    Whatever, it's fine.

    and local AI features

    HOLLUP

  • In small apartments curtains are definitely a cheap way to divide space, or make a single small space more adaptable or modular. I knew plenty of young adults in tiny NYC apartments that used curtains to "wall off" a sleeping area in a studio apartment, or create a make-shift workspace. Heck, I did that during lockdowns to have a work space. Although I did discover the downside of curtains, they do little to dampen sound and (to a lesser extent) smells.

  • I'm interested in how this takes place in one room with a curtain divider, which I think was more common when home sizes were much smaller.

  • Both are risking the lives and safety of the non-consenting public as they beta test 2-ton vehicles on public streets. Damn them both.

  • I think we're both in agreement about the result, but we shouldn't forget that testimony is evidence. The chump behind the wheel will deny it, so you'll have conflicting testimonial evidence, but until recently, this was usually all the evidence any prosecutor had. We've gotten too used to video evidence and now police won't act without it, even though it's not legally required. It just provides a convenient excuse for cops not to bother when they don't care.

  • It sucks but unless he hurt you, hit your bike, or you have any sort of footage what is the police suppose to do?

    It's worth noting that most American states have a "3 foot law" that requires vehicles to pass bikers with at least 3 feet of space. (Often, drivers are also required to completely change lanes when doing so, although that varies more by state and by the width of the lane on that particular road.) If a driver in one of the 39 states runs a biker off the road, even if they never physically contacted the person on the bike, they almost certainly violated the "3 foot law."

    Yes, police often won't investigate or bring charges, and yes, it sucks, but most of those dangerous drivers are indeed breaking the law.

  • I call it his “big boy gun”

    Good! And I hope you never let him hear the end of it. What a poser.

  • 2014 phones also fit in my hand. I miss that size, you can't even find them now.