Super fun, pardner. That horse is looking a little sparse, though. Maybe you could draw that horse winning the lottery and subsequently losing most of that money to gambling debts?
Spider-Man: Miles Morales x BNA. Of all the superheroes this is probably one of the best crossovers, being a city-bound teenager with animal-themed powers grappling with the establishment.
Cynicism is a symptom of a broken system that either breaks promises or fails to meet needs.
If we define tolerance as a social contract and not as a moral imperative, we leave room for it. Perhaps it's true that a society only functions best with universal tolerance, but one can function in a society carrying intolerance. Either by hiding it or finding like minded individuals.
In 99 we only had crappy dialup and I didn't really know how to browse the web, even if I sort of understood the basics (and I would have been six, admittedly). My dad would look up cheat codes at work for games I was playing and download the Web page onto a floppy drive to bring home to me. It was wild times.
That to say, the infrastructure was all there, but it's hardly guaranteed as a kid that you're browsing the web and know where to find all the best glitches.
Maybe I started watching late but Weissman always kind of struck me as trying too hard on the comedy bits, but I don't mind because it is good knowledge nonetheless. My biggest issue is that he's a little on the pretentious side and he occasionally uses fancy/expensive/inaccessible ingredients or tools, but that's really just a personal problem for me.
I don't think it's just a feeling of futility - it's true phones can be distracting and offer more potential entertainment, and it's true learning can sometimes be a slog. At the same time, learning can be fun and engaging, and phones can offer access to a wealth of information (of highly varying quality, admittedly).
Concentrating too hard on mere academic success as gauged by metrics like school grades is undoubtedly discouraging for a student who only goes to school if they are told they must.
For most people, it doesn't matter unless it's happening near them. Source: Texan.
I do agree that $10 is more in line with what I'd expect personally, but to be fair you have a few options before getting to that point.
If you know you're going to be using Sync and staying on Lemmy, you have no problem.
If you're staying on Lemmy but just trying Sync, you can just use the app with ads for a while to try it out, or you could subscribe to the monthly subscription which is like $2 a month, and if you are still using it 10 months later then it's clearly worth the cost to you.
Or if you don't like ads and you don't like subscriptions and you're not attached to Sync, you probably just move on to another app!
I've recently started using Edge as a YouTube TV browser. It's a temporary arrangement, but it lets me cast from mobile across the room.
I think with the registration questions they're just trying to solve two things: preventing bots from signing up, and preventing trolls. It doesn't seem so bad, really.
I came to the conclusion that it was a delightful meringue