So it is indeed greener where you water. Try the body thing next and let us know.
So it is indeed greener where you water. Try the body thing next and let us know.
I miss Windows phone, still the most intuitive phone UI I’ve ever seen.
There’s an old but IMO still very relevant white paper by Microsoft titled “So Long, And No Thanks for the Externalities: The Rational Rejection of Security Advice by Users”. It argues that security measures often cost more in employee time (and hence wages) than the potential benefit. It’s an interesting read and I think about it whenever our chief of security cooked up with another asinine security measure.
You got a lot of great recommendations already, but I want to add one more indie game: Lost Words Beyond the Page. Gameplay is simple and it’s not very long, but the writing is excellent.
You should be aware that “maintaining” that PC may be more than you expect. Just this weekend I had to help my aunt because the bank’s website had a “big thing in front of it” that she couldn’t get rid of. It turned out to be a cookie banner that was just a bit too big for her laptop screen, and the buttons to close it were out of the frame.
That’s just an example of course, but depending on the person(s) using it, there may need to be someone at hand to help at all times.
Don’t worry, DRM-ed content isn’t recorded, so big companies’ IP is protected.
I tried, but it always comes up with pictures of airplanes for some reason.
Violations of privacy. Microsoft has that too though, so unless Google has wallpapers they need to step up their game.
Am I the only one who’s more bothered by “wyd” missing a second w than by the picture?
What happened to Lord Buckethead?
As a late Gen X, I was completely lost. So, I guess it’s official: I don’t get your generation.
Ah thank you. I was unaware of the matrix protocol.
I’m obviously out of the loop, because I don’t know. Can someone explain?
He was using a decimal comma. The counter offer was 1000 times more than he wanted to pay.
You mean the thing that Opera had in the 90s, and Vivaldi since inception?
It was the style at the time.
It’s a reference to The Simpsons.
I didn’t count them, but wired itself has a very impressive list of “partners” in their cookie disclaimer too.
Vivaldi with built-in ad block. Every once in a while YouTube changes something and ads get through for a couple of days. Then a Vivaldi update fixes it again quickly. I assume Vivaldi is too small a target for YouTube to care more.
The man knows. The man knows everything about you. They’re always watching.
If the Internet has taught me anything, they’re 42 and 69.