for adults
for adults
Matthew, particularly, was so obsessed with this idea that he even made up new scriptures that didn’t exist and said Jesus fulfilled them.
My Labrador has excellent teeth.
Man’s best friend becomes man’s best mouth.
“Earth First” is an interesting and compelling explanation for the Fermi Paradox.
Back in the day, Walmart and Apple fought over contactless pay standards for the US.
Apple’s standard was eventually mass adopted, and since then Walmart has refused to license the tech. So you have to use their app, which uses their own tech stack.
How many languages do you speak?
Perfectly rigid sticks don’t exist.
8 was at least an attempt to try to make things better for home users and get away from win32 cruff.
Like or hate the exact approach they took, you have to admire the spirit.
10 and 11 has been Microsoft saying “fuck em. They won’t ever be happy steal everything you can while they’re still here.”
That’s fine. 1% per uberweird news cycle is the death of facebook.
Zuck invented the feed.
I’d like to see one of these publications post recipes for CEO stew.
Cincinnati chili is beloved by Cincinnati, though…
FFS, his leak is probably in an extension.
Installing more extensions that might also leak is not a real solution, no matter what they do.
End-to-end encryption matters if your device isn’t actively trying to sabotage your privacy.
If you run Android, Google is guilty of that.
If you run Windows in a non-enterprise environment Microsoft is guilty of that.
If you run iOS or MacOS, Apple is (very likely) guilty of that.
FAT chain traversal sounds like a diet plan. 😅
“couldn’t do anything”
This was a third-party implementation problem, not an OS issue.
By the time Third party software stopped being all loosy-goosey like the OS was windows XP, Microsoft had already re-branded the OS to Win7.
Vista’s UAC wasn’t any more problematic than sudo is.
Soundtrack to Secret of Mana makes me cry evertim
You can’t store flour in burlap bags LMAO.
Do you know what flour and or burlap is?
But yes, flour sacks were a popular source of clothing, so the flour companies printed patterns on them.