Just stay seated. You're going to wait for the luggage anyway.
bstix
They'll learn the lesson of a break up just like anyone else. They'll get over it and eventually find another chatbot.
It might even prepare them somewhat for IRL relationships. Things do not always work out and you can't count on the other part to always do as expected.
It could actually be interesting to give these bots less than ideal personalities just to teach the users how to interact with actual people. With some caution though, because I can definitely see that go really bad too.
Det er også fint nok. Det er det samme som den del virksomheder ikke kan trække fra. Hvis alle dermed betaler den samme afgift pr. kWh så er jeg tilfreds.
You're not thinking big: Rent out other people's faces!
Instead of an actual click farm where slave workers click phones all day, you make an app.
The app works like this: When the users (or let's call them: "Partners") get a notification from your app, they just have to smile at the camera, sometimes do other expressions. They are then rewarded with points which they can trade for for actual real life discounts on real online stores. Something like 1 cent per picture.
You now setup a service for people who want to bypass facial age verification and feed their requests directly to the app for a small fee of 5 cents per verification.
Jeg så gerne at man fjernede den helt. Den rammer de forkerte.
Virksomheder trækker det fra i momsangivelsen. Private med elbil eller elvarme får det refunderet. Folk med lav indtægt har i flere år fået en "grøn check" som fradrag på skatteopgørelsen som hjælp til at betale grønne afgifter. Altså, man skal nærmest gøre sig umage for rent faktisk at bidrage til at betale de grønne afgifter.
Det eneste resultat er at den øger moms-grundlaget, som private ikke kan fradrage.
I min optik burde den slags afgifter ligge der hvor der forbruges mest strøm: I industrien. Så må de øge deres priser eller lave energibesparende tiltag eller hvad der nu skal til.
MAGA: Why did he make them do that to him?
I'd advise you to get the type 2 home charger anyway. Even if your expected mileage is very low.
The savings of not getting one aren't worth the hassle of having to charge slowly constantly, and being depended on that slow charge.
A proper charger will enable you to take spontaneous drives more often. It could allow you to take advantage of cheap hourly rates (if that's an option). It removes the dependence on public chargers. It'll be fast enough for two cars if you eventually need that in case one of you gets a new job or you have family visiting etc.
So, sure, you don't neeeeed it, but it's easier in all of those situations that are just a little outside the ordinary and optimized commuting schedule.
None, but I do tag trolls and other kinds of idiots, so I can avoid replying to them but still read what they're up to.
It doesn’t matter if you have no other clothes
I'm going to report you to the fashion police.
Travel somewhere. It will break your habits and offer you new things to think about.
I once lost my glasses and used an ordinary drinking glass as a monocle as substitute. It wasn't perfect, but good enough for me to find my glasses. (This was before cell phones had cameras).
Having been very near sighted for most of my life, I've come to the conclusion that it's not really that big of a handicap. It's mostly an issue for reading things, and even that can be done when putting it close enough.
I can't really think of anything in a hypothetical apocalypse where 20/20 vision would be absolutely necessary.
I've tried a few different distributions and yeah, it varies.
It seems logical to get Ubuntu Studio for audio, but in my personal opinion it's kinda bloated. I've tried most of the included software at some point and decided that I'm not going to use it.
I'd rather have a clean simple distro and then just install Reaper for all my audio needs.
That has worked out great on both Mint and Puppy. I don't know about Ubuntu, because it's been several years since I tried that.
I did also install a few games on Mint, but nothing like AAA games, because the PC doesn't have a graphics card. I just play Minecraft and Sauerbraten. No issues with those.
Maybe I'm lucky, or maybe it's because it's old hardware or pretty standard laptops, but I'm also not trying much, so I also expect it to work.
Keep it simple. I think that might be the key, because I have seriously not had a single issue with anything, nor have I typed a single line in the terminal.
If I needed a multipurpose PC, I'd probably go with Mint as of now. I'd install one app at a time and figure out what I actual need instead of trying to make everything work at once.
That's what I'm doing with my DAW right now. One plugin at a time. If something doesn't behave, then I don't need it. When I turn on the PC to make music, I don't want to waste time fixing stuff. I'm totally over trying to fit a square block into a round hole. I've already tried that for too many years using Windows.