

As a citizen of the US, it’s not like we entirely respect rule-of-law. We’re all too happy to overlook enforcing laws against rich/famous/corporate, and all too happy to overlook legal protections for poor/immigrants/minorities.
As a citizen of the US, it’s not like we entirely respect rule-of-law. We’re all too happy to overlook enforcing laws against rich/famous/corporate, and all too happy to overlook legal protections for poor/immigrants/minorities.
Full agree. Get his product’s name as part of the general term and it’d confuse people into thinking it was the original.
I’ve never heard the term “threadiverse”. Where are you coming across it?
Depends entirely on the person and what things they want out of a social life.
For me, if I didn’t have social media, there’s a lot I’d miss out on. It’s how two of my main social communities communicate any of their events, and it’s a big part of a third. There would definitely be a negative impact for me if I nuked all my accounts.
You can certainly build your life to have your definition of a thriving social life without it, but you’ll have to go out of your way to find those groups that use other methods for communication.
Depends on your definition of “eat”.
If you mean “Can be chewed and swallowed without causing undue harm”, then, yeah, you can eat wood. Well, most wood, I’m sure there’s some out there that are some level of toxic to humans.
If you mean, “can be consumed as a source of nutrition”, then, no, you can’t eat wood. Humans lack the capability to digest it.
It seems rather ironic to make that post on a fediverse service.
You could always try booting up a Live CD and testing it out. It’ll run a bit slower than a native install, but it’s a super-easy way to check things out.
Which is hilarious to me because how Linux handles application installations/updates though package management is so much easier than anything on the Microsoft side. No muss, no fuss, no chasing down dependencies, just “install X” and X is now cleanly installed on your system as well as everything it needs to run.
Depends on the story being told. Some stories are perfectly encapsulated in 90 minutes, some need 90 episodes.
That said, I find shows have both a lower initial commitment and a higher potential payoff, so I don’t watch many movies.