

Yes, they’re terrible because you can’t navigate through their settings without a mouse. Tab only goes so far in KDE. I couldn’t stand it.
M30s in Milwaukee, WI. I’ll never say “no” to a meal at Naf Naf Grill!


Yes, they’re terrible because you can’t navigate through their settings without a mouse. Tab only goes so far in KDE. I couldn’t stand it.


Huh? Is that “AII” or “All” or what?


Yeah, we can no longer msg other participants without paying. I guess they’ve picked up on it having dating potential since it has a “Single” designation so it may get added to Match’s ever-growing portfolio down the years, haha.


No, but I used to be more active until I saw that they started to increasingly prevent you from talking to other participants, and even seeing who other people are (can’t even tell gender or anything) unless you paid for their higher tier. I literally saw it get added out of the blue after years of no such restrictions, and they’ve only dug deeper and deeper. I couldn’t even connect with someone with whom I met just because I didn’t attempt to get their number immediately on the spot.


I hope they eventually crumple from hiring stupider and stupider team leads, then.


Good thing none of us have iPhones here, right, guys? Right?


It’s just platform-milking, just like Meetup.com’s latest antics; there isn’t deep analysis needed to everything, haha. “Capitalism” is totally a legitimate answer despite being just one word.


Wait, what’re those last two?


Linux Mint Cinnamon is incredible, free to try/move to, and reversible.


Wait, why do you replace “th” with that character?


EDIT: Never mind, I got it now.
Copyright, yes it’s a problem and should be fixed.
The quick fix: stick to open-source like Jan.ai.
Long-term solution: make profiting AI companies pay for UBI. How to actually calculate that, though, is anyone’s guess…


Credit bureaus are certainly evil but modern life in the US still forces us to work with them, so you may as well register free online credentials with them all so you can check the records they have on you for accuracy. They actually do respond quite consistently fast. I once had a LendingClub thing listed in my history when I’ve never touched anything involving the company, and whichever-bureau-it-was (I can’t remember any more) promptly removed it upon my informing them.
It’s definitely worth doing.
The average person has less self-control than you, sadly.