I think it works well enough if you take into account it’s on a phone.
I think it works well enough if you take into account it’s on a phone.
You can play Morrowind on Android through OpenMW Android. I think this is the most updated version but you have to build it yourself: https://gitlab.com/cavebros/openmw-android
Yes, fair. I was just attracted by the no-hassle method of Tailscale.
Probably why this isn’t enabled in the EU. GDPR wouldn’t have allowed it.
I’d willingly want to move down to 4-day weeks in some year even with the reduced salary. I’m privileged enough to afford it, and the time regained is absolutely worth the loss in salary and future pension. I’d like alternating Mondays and Fridays, so every 2 weeks you get a 4-day weekend.
I’m just waiting for some FOSS purist to find fault in this.
I don’t know if this is a US thing. I have no large expectations of HR, but I’m also part of a union and like most places my company has signed a collective union agreement. If there’s a conflict the union will represent you as well. The HR people at my company seem completely OK though, I have dealings with them due to my role.
The answers in this thread are all over, but it’s towards this direction I’m leaning
I think it’s been proven that Google doesn’t listen in to your conversations. While there are a lot of real privacy issues, the microphone theory is just conspiracy fear-mongering
It’s generally really hard if you have no experience. But if you’re willing to pay, maybe. Check this out: https://hitchwiki.org/en/Hitchhiking_a_boat
This reaffirms my wish to go back to monkey.
Yeah, I love name recognition! That’s definitely one of the things I’ve missed from old-school forums. I’ve never felt content aggregators (or well, reddit) really replacing forums , but I definitely feel it more with MBin and Lemmy. Good input otherwise.
It’s true that there is a difference between e.g., FB and anonymous social media, but they can still be heavily addictive. You can still want to be “in the know” for example, or just sit around mindlessly browsing instead of dedicating yourself to more worthwhile tasks that you’d like to do, or just sit around and refresh the notification page.
A reminder that Opera is owned by a Chinese public company. I wouldn’t trust the browser for privacy reasons.