Because whitespace sensitivity makes it very easy to make a whole bunch of annoying mistakes when shuffling code around, or copying it from one source to another (from text in one application to the editor in your ide for example). I find it supremely unpleasant to work with. Looking kinda a little bit slightly messed up should not be a critical syntax error that breaks the whole code.
I wonder... did he ride an obnoxiously loud horse? Was his gambeson adorned with the stylized emblems of various troubadours and/or bandit gangs? Did he run a shady laudanum business from the back office of the local inn?
So many of those are also fiction. There was a post somewhere, where the op had compiled a list of top relationshipadvice posts that were highly suspicious at the very least up if you went into their posters' histories. People were eating them up.
That sub became mostly a creative writing gym a long time ago.
I mean I am pretty happy with my nothing phone. It came with a pretty minimal stock android that runs on hardware that's quite good for what I paid. Despite the shitty name that people have indeed made fun of, the phone's been pretty good so far.
These things are very heavily optimized for the singular purpose of reading books. They can't do much of anything else, but they do that one thing very well and very efficiently. They run a custom, lightweight Linux OS that's very aggressive with its battery management. Coupled with an e-ink display, they sip power and can run for weeks on a single charge. That's not something a simple android can provide.
I once read a review of a sous vide machine that just would not work unless it was connected to a smartphone via an app. And then that app would not work properly without a connection to some backend. That backend died at some point, bricking the sous vide machine. What a wonderful world we live in.
They're not out of order, it's just there are two orders. The left side is "what if bicycles" themed and the right side is "what if bus" themed. Except the top left is shared, of course.
Obviously it could have been presented more clearly though.
No idea who that is