Lol, I love seeing that no idea is completely unique. I have been thinking about it a lot over the last month. I am honestly wondering what your ethical concerns are with this "digital replication".
So, I have to ask why whimsical.co's navigation is so counter-intuitive? Why do arrow keys move the screen the opposite direction, and why is there no drag and drop? I am not trying to be aggressive, I just want to understand the design decision?
I just want to pop in and say that I am planning on moving from lastpass to bitwarden. I have significant problems with the lastpass android app, the biggest being my CORRECT password being rejected; also the app is just really buggy in general. I hope bitwarden is an improvement.
The historical component for this work ethic is frequently tied to Protestantism, especially Puritanism. Work was divinely mandated, and shirking that responsibility was socially unacceptable. Work was also more necessary, as not working hard enough could led to the death of your community. Just my two cents
This passage and the article really spoke to me. I was raised in a strongly Catholic family in the US. I have since apostized from the Catholic church, but I still exist in that community. I know many people who are good solely because of their faith and that scares me. I am uncomfortable with individuals who offshore morality.
Okay, this was rambly, but my point is agree with your post, and I feel the effects of cultural Christianity in the US.
I honestly think that article 11 and 13 will grow more decentralized options. Peertube is only federated, so it won't benefit as much as it could, but it will still help. If the platform is responsible for copyright, then it will definitely be easier to just burn that server and then spin up a new one. Just my 2 cents
I was born and raised in Delaware, so I will give my quick take on it.
> The State of Delaware had turned the East Coast’s main traffic artery into a sweltering parking lot merely so it could exact a tribute from each driver crossing its miserable little stretch of concrete.
Wow, the author has a lot of emotion for a supposedly one-time problem. Delaware pays for a little over 69% of its state and local road maintenance; the tolls help pay for it.
> The practice of charging road tolls is an archaic holdover blighting much of the Northeast.
Roads cost money to maintain, and eventually, replace. Tolls are supposed to help pay for this stuff.
> The whole paragraph on Gunning Bedford Jr.
Pointing fingers at anyone in the colonial era is objectively dumb. For example, Roger Sherman, a representative for Connecticut, helped write the 3/5 compromise, where slaves were counted as 3/5 of a human for voting purposes. Quick, Connecticut is evil incarnate, you should hate it.
> When the nation mobilized for the War of 1812, Delaware manufacturers, led by the du Ponts, demanded that their laborers be exempt from military service.
If the author did any research into the Du Pont company, they would know that the mills were gunpowder mills. Now, why would everyone want gunpowder mills to be run by their skilled employees in a war?
> Delaware voted against the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution, which freed the slaves and gave them the vote and equal protection.
Yes, Delaware was racist, and some parts still are. However, as the author makes clear, this is not specific problem for Delaware, but a systemic problem throughout the US.
> Delaware also set itself apart through its fondness for medieval forms of punishment.
Okay, I honestly didn't know this stuff, and I did double check that it is generally accurate. It is shitty, but still it was 60 years ago.
>If a state wants to charge drivers for the cost of maintaining roads, tolls are a dubious way to do it—the traffic congestion they produce can be more costly than the toll itself.
Outdated; easy-pass barely has any effect on traffic.
> The rant about tolls
Blah, blah, Delaware is malevolent; Delaware is an abstract entity that doesn't have intent. It is a collection of any number of individuals who may fit or not fit with the author's view of Delaware.
> To nonresidents, of course, it makes not a whit of difference that our tolls finance Delaware’s airports rather than its schools.
Ironic, Delaware has no commercial airports; as I have already said, Delaware pays for a majority of its local and state road maintenance, which otherwise would come from the federal government. Guess, where that federal tax money comes from?
> Seizing the opportunity to exploit unwary consumers across the country, eight of the ten largest credit-card firms in the country now operate within Delaware. In the meantime, personal bankruptcy nationwide has risen sevenfold over the last two decades, and tens of millions of Americans send checks to Delaware every month.
There is no direct line of causation that the author even pretends to offer. This is textbook misdirection. Of course, people send checks to Delaware because that is where their banks are.
> But just after the Pennsylvania bank ceased its payday lending, a bank based out of Delaware opened up shop in its place.
I mean that could be related, but the author does not give enough evidence.
> The revenue stream is so large (relative to Delaware’s budget) that the state needs no sales tax.
Delaware also has quite high property tax; taxes are distributed differently in every state. Some states have high income tax, some have high sales tax; it doesn't matter which.
Okay, this is as far as a can stand to go. The author hates Delaware, I don't know why.
KDE connect has an Android app that does this and most of the other stuff I assume Apple enables; I don't use Apple products, because I use Arch and Android.
No. It is the first PUBLICALY TRADED company on the US STOCK MARKET to be valued at $1T. There have been many companies that have broken that point in inflation-adjusted and NON-inflation-adjusted valuations. Three big ones are the Dutch East India company, the most valuable company in history, Standard Oil, the most valuable US company ever, and Saudi Aramco, the current, most valuable company. I've seen to many articles claiming this today, so I rage wrote this on mobile.
Very few people believe in absolute free speech; few people think it is okay to falsely say someone is a paedophile, which gets them lynched. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-44709103
Absolute free speech is very rarely the actual debate. The actual debate starts after we all, mostly, agree that people shouldn't be lynched or defamed from comments.
Nice idea, I have definitely felt that the browser market space has become to stagnant and bland. I am surprised you are using cookies for what mostly seems to be a product outline.
I have obsessively read the Silmarillion and the Children of Hurin, and they are overarchingly the same, just in different formats. The Silmarillion is written like a history book; the Children of Hurin is written like a novel.
I never got through the poem of Beren and Luthian, I am not a poem guy, but from the bits I have read, it seemed to have the same relationship to the Silmarillion as the Children of Hurin.
Also, I am unclear if this is a "new" version of the Fall of Gondolin or just a new printing of the old one. Anyone found a more detailed source?