I’m all for setting a precedent if it’s about banning chinese spyware and propaganda weapons.
I’m all for setting a precedent if it’s about banning chinese spyware and propaganda weapons.
I always thought it was more like toast.
This is not about a single coworker and a door, but intended as a generic light-hearted roast for everybody who keep ignoring simple signs such as which waste bin is for paper, how to leave a room, etc. Petty? Sure as hell. Being a dick? Wouldn’t say so.
Yes, that’s my conclusion as well. What job doesn’t require any of these?
Don’t forget them immense selection of languages for both audio tracks and subtitles!
You said yourself that a penny is too much. What’s lower than a penny and not free?
Then the problem is not that the practice of renting exists, but wealth inequality. Which we fully agree on, especially since several mechanisms are at work that further the gap between the rich and the poor. These all should be addressed.
What’s holding you back from taking a loan and paying mortgage instead of rent? Risk aversion?
By realising that what we now call waste will be the fuel source of the future. And also understanding that the renewables require a lot more area, material and energy to build than nuclear: https://robertbryce.substack.com/p/the-iron-law-of-power-density-part
Team watering can represents 🤙
My wife is a 30+ woman and she loved (among others) OneShot, World of Goo, and Final Fantasy XV.
OneShot is an atmospheric, story-based game with some puzzle elements and a lot of lovable characters. On the flip side, there’s a lot of walking and it’s easy to get lost. Nevertheless, there’s a deep connection you as the player can build with the characters and the world they inhabit.
World of Goo is a physics-based building game, where you build bridges and towers out of cute sentient rubber-like balls, but beneath the solid physics, art and music there lies a deep social commentary too.
Final Fantasy XV is the most mainstream of these, but it is an entry into the FF games specifically designed for newcomers in mind. It follows four main and several supporting characters on a journey that starts as a road trip interspersed with beginner-friendly but still jaw-droppingly well rendered and animated combat and slowly but surely escalated to an epic catharsis.