this is just awful, there’s something weird in his arm, his head is on backwards (or his knees and feet bend the wrong way) and there’s a strange blue thing sticking out etc etc
Mid 50s, first went online on a 70s BBS, JANET user in the 80s.
this is just awful, there’s something weird in his arm, his head is on backwards (or his knees and feet bend the wrong way) and there’s a strange blue thing sticking out etc etc
Very good. I was going for The Woman with Half Her Leg Missing but Footloose is fantastic. I salute you.
Yeah, and some have screens on the front and back of the monitors. And those keyboards have hundreds of keys.
Is it “There’s too many legs and arms”?
Really wish people would learn how to use AI.
yes, there’s lots wrong with picture.
There’s AI and then there’s “Oh my God, one of them has a foot pointing backwards”
I think the other thing to remember is that in different English speaking countries the word as a verb causes a different level of offence.
In British English it’s not offensive at all to say someone was b***ing about something.
It is odd that community bans don’t come with any communication.
Good question, I was thinking about this the other day. The reason being that development of several fediverse apps has seemingly stalled because the previously active developers have life issues. (I’m not moaning about it, just a straightforward account)
It seems to me that FOSS developers wouldn’t want their projects to be popular. Because that comes with pressure to constantly improve or expand and it takes up more time. So they start a Patreon or similar but that adds more pressure.
When projects are community developed then I see disagreements and personality clashes which increases stress for lead developers.
Phones encrypt the data by default, your password or pin is also needed to authorise the connection with a computer.
However, many people do insecure things like storing passwords etc in Notes applications, or having simple PINs that are easy to guess, don’t update their devices, or even turning off security features (if they can) because they won’t take a small amount of time to understand them.