But I have allergies :(
I try to limit my social media to less than 30m per day. Lemmy is pretty much exclusively the only SM I use
But then they only get 1/16th the frames?
I get this advice, but I hate this advice. I have a million things to do that take just a couple minutes. I never know when to stop!
Fuck seriously? I have a Chromecast from like 7 years ago and I was considering getting a newer model just because, you know, improvements and stuff. But definitely not if there are ads. Holy shit no.
Maybe :q! (Bang)
I’m too dumb to understand this. Can you explain please?
I scanned through this and my takeaway is that it’s just defining a formal grammar for iso 8601. Did I miss anything important?
I had a hard time with this too, I didn’t even know there were supposed to be words. What finally did it was actually squinting, like so much that my eyes are nearly closed and I can just see a little between my eyelashes. Then it stands out clear as day.
I sure hope so. It’s about damn time.
I’m here from reddit
Like as a browser you mean? Then what’s Firefox for?
What’s duckduckgo for in this combo? VPN? Search?
Can you elaborate on this?
I’m curious about this use case. It actually sounds pretty convenient, but it also sounds like a wet dream for scalpers since it makes it so easy to buy a bunch and resell for insane prices. On one hand, the price someone is willing to pay is the true value, so you could argue that the original seller wasn’t charging enough. But on the other hand, if scalpers buy up all the supply then they’re artificially increasing the price. I don’t really know anything about economics, I’m just guessing.
In the traditional world of tickets, you could hypothetically prevent reselling by tying a ticket to a person’s id (not that anybody does this, but you could). But in the nft world you described where you can resell your ticket, is there any solution to prevent scalping?
Tbh that kind of behavior will almost certainly be stopped automatically