Maybe even just call it a service charge like other places in the world.
Maybe even just call it a service charge like other places in the world.
Another way of looking at YOLO
While watching, was constantly switching between ‘why would anyone do this’ to being thoroughly impressed at the technical and artistic achievement.
Sync was my preferred app. Will pay money again for a lemmy version
It’s not like you have to write an essay. I just wrote a couple of sentences and was accepted almost immediately. Took me all of 1 minute total to apply and could post within the hour.
On the Jerboa app, swiping right to go back to to previous page. And the ability to hide viewed posts on both mobile app and browses.
At least if you pre-order with steam, you can get a refund according to their normal policies if the game doesn’t meet your expectations.
Though the only advantage tends to be preloading the game plus whatever bullshit bonus games tend to come with when you pre-order.
Did they actually go dark without warning or announcing their plans? That would have been pretty meta.
Outer Wilds is one of the best experiences I had in my gaming life. Just a shame that the magic only seemed to happen on first playthrough. And the expansion didn’t quite scratch the itch.
Would highly recommend people play that game if you haven’t tried it yet.
I love rhythm games but not normally a fan of action arcade. Hi Fi rush is something special though and I think everyone should give it a chance.
Was into the tabletop simulator version of TI4 for a while. But even with automated set up and digital streamlining, the games are still 6-8 hours.
Love the game, but just don’t have time to play anymore.
Still missing that swipe right to go back to the previous page. That feature just made browsing so seamless.
Thing is, it already has a mainstream audience with the majority of its users on the official app and using the garbage redesigned website.
Just wondering if the mods and people actually making content are part of that audience or not.
I’m hoping no, and that reddit will fail like Digg given its horrible decision making the last few days. May that IPO crash and burn.
I think a back of the envelope cost for what each user makes reddit per month was something around $0.22 per month. Which is nowhere near the $2.5 per month their API pricing was suggesting.
This wasn’t a question of opportunity cost, and setting prices in good faith. They simply wanted to kill any competition and somehow thought they could get away with this. Hopefully we can show them they can’t with the blackout and migrating to other online communities.
Could try studying stochastic philosophy. I’ve always generally been calm but had an extra realization that getting upset at things doesn’t help the situation I’m in and is generally just a waste of energy. So why waste time feeling terrible when I can just accept whatever is going on and move on with my life.