Gotta cook it before wrapping it
Just somebody that you used to know.
Gotta cook it before wrapping it
I was an early reddit user from before the time subreddits existed. Much of the user base, including myself, were asking for tag functionality, but the subreddit concept was introduced instead. I guess they needed a way to moderate tags, and that was their solution. Decades later, they told those same mods to go fuck themselves, so maybe they should have just used tags in the first place like they clearly expected subreddits to act.
If this turns out to be EU-only, then it’ll be useful for niche apps and ones that aren’t normally allowed (like emulators, third party YouTube apps, and other cool shit), but it won’t be commercially useful for the titans of tech like Google and Meta. Not a bad start.
This Mike Johnson guy continues to have the same level of self-awareness as the same Mike Johnson from Morty’s quarter-assed made up story in the Story Train episode of Rick and Morty.
Call it CaptainObvious
Hope this one is as fun as the first one was on acid!
I haven’t seen such delusion in a business model since Musk bought Twitter and caused most of their revenue to cease.
And here I assumed the massive troves of vote data were themselves valuable. Guess not.
As an American visiting Europe, please do! Dealing with multiple airports here sucks so much!
Chew gum. Sounds similar.
And how deep your bites are.
No need to refresh. Duplicate replies are a fact of life on federated sites or threads that get a lot of activity.
As far as I can tell, following someone via Kbin is for either getting their microblog posts (Mastodon-style) or for more generally getting their activity federated to your instance (if it’s like the general ActivityPub concept).
Based on how many people invested in GameStop, AMC, and Bed, Bath, And Beyond, there is clearly a large number of dumbass retail investors. Too bad that’s unlikely to be enough to make a good IPO.
Just in time for the EU to also force third party app stores through, and X attempting to make one sounds plausible even if they get nowhere with it.