The microchips aren’t edible because they want you to eat them. They’re edible because they know some idiot eventually will eat one.
The microchips aren’t edible because they want you to eat them. They’re edible because they know some idiot eventually will eat one.
You can use ProtonMail with Thunderbird. You just need to run ProtonMail Bridge on the same device.
It works alright but there are still issues. My biggest gripe with it is that sleeping doesn’t really work. I will often close my laptop and then come back to a dead laptop the next day because the battery drained all night.
a sit.com, if you will
Oh wow. The person who dropped that is having a terrible day.
I have really long, thick, curly hair. My showers can easily take 45 minutes to an hour because of everything I need to do to wash, detangle, and finish my hair routine.
For what it’s worth, I think Elon is both evil and an idiot.
Frankly, if they aren’t tech savvy, you should just have them use Authy. No, it’s not open source, but it’s just fine for the average user.
Frankly, if they aren’t tech savvy, you should just have them use Authy. No, it’s not open source, but it’s just fine for the average user.
Definitely the Kobo Libra 2 or the Kobo Nia. I bought both a Kindle and a Kobo Libra 2 and ended up returning the Kindle because book piracy was a pain. The overall Kobo user experience is just a whole lot more pleasant.
Bitwarden gets my vote.
I just don’t subscribe to those communities and that seems to work well enough. When I don’t want to see it, I sort by subscribed. If I’m in the mood for memes or shitposts, I sort by all.
Interesting. I guess I’ve just been lucky enough to find all the content I look for.
If you really want to build an awesome Plex/Jellyfin library, start using Usenet instead of torrents.
myanonamouse is by far the best private tracker for books, and getting an invite was super easy.
Wow, are you me? I just posted a super similar story, but it was 9 years ago using an iMac.
When I was in high school, I reset the admin password on one of the macs in the computer lab in single user mode and used it to find the school’s Wi-Fi password in the keychain. Shared it with a few friends and it eventually made its way to most of the student body. It was a total game changer for all of us because we all had smartphones (this was in 2014ish) but the building had virtually no cell service indoors whatsoever.
No, not so far
Arc is incredible. I can’t wait for it to come to Windows