

I agree! It’s a deliberate action taken that makes them addictive!


I agree! It’s a deliberate action taken that makes them addictive!
I run a private pixelfed instance as a sort of family photo archive. Works well enough!


Admittedly, I’m not going to read this.
How is it even possible?! On the physical level.


Is it actually “pushing”? I’ve always thought the consumer is “pulling”.


Used to never care. Not one bit.
And then I treated myself to an E60 M5.
Day 2 - some random guy compliments it and starts a chat.
Random talks at the lights. In the parking lots.
Someone walked up to me in Belgium and asked if he can take a photo. Of a disgustingly dirty car that had been driven 1200 miles in the last 24 hours. I just shrugged it off and said sure, go ahead.
Point being - I am now aware of it being a thing. It’s also a pleasant feeling, so now I try to do the same. Last one I complimented was an E34 M5. Guy made the appropriate smile of acknowledgment back.


Ha! Good.
Hey, that’s a sysadmin’s job!


So glad this is irrelevant to me!
Another one right next to me!



Till first light - yes. But then I won’t get the penalty of you being slow or on your phone. You won’t be behind me at the second light.
I have a working hypothesis, the short of which goes something like this:
windows makes one memorise orders of infinite submenus, while linux makes you understand the way it works.
That attitude is what’s getting in your way. Do what you’re good at and become as close to the best on the market as possible.
It’s not free lunch, but there’s no magic!
Meh. The recruiters that matter know better. The candidates that matter have no problem getting a job they want.
It’s the intent that matters.


Nothing. Lemmy being edgy teens.


Good for them. Fuck that scum country.


Surprising nobody.


Nothing is impossible. Might be improbable, but definitely possible!
No need to capitalise russia.
An obvious strictly-headlines-only reader.