I really enjoy it. I believe they (the stories) happen in the Americas, it’d be interesting to see a European story as well.
I really enjoy it. I believe they (the stories) happen in the Americas, it’d be interesting to see a European story as well.
Started watching season 2 of “Worst Roomates Ever”. I still need to watch season 2 of “Unchained” as well.
That’s kind of depressing compared to Ireland (specifically Dublin). Things are just so expensive here.
That’s the plan.
I’ve got a couple movies and TV shows hosted on my PC. When I eventually get a NAS for my business, I’ll host Jellyfin on a NAS
PC Specs: EndeavourOS Ryzen 5 3600 32GB RAM GTX 1660TI
Search has definitely been iffy. Sometimes it’s been pretty decent (also based in Ireland) but other times it leaves me wondering what “it was thinking”
Edit: corrected the comment. I forgot to finish the rest of the last sentence.
Do you remember the name? I haven’t watched a dinosaur documentary in many years.
I’ve been using it since the beta and this is how it works.
Not quite Arch, but I’ve been running EndeavourOS without any issues. It’s been super stable! The only time I’ve had issues is when I’ve messed with the system.
I’m pretty sure it’s using the default GNOME wallpaper.
I don’t think they work at all on comments, although I don’t have hard evidence to confirm this. However, I believe there are “block lists” you can add to your websites robots.txt
that work decently.
I remember seeing something on Reddit a while back (well before the API fiasco) that this was a bug. Hopefully that is the case here as well.
I’m not sure if this is part of the “frequency illusion”, but I’ve noticed a lot more mainstream media talking about Linux as a viable alternative.
When I moved to Lemmy from Reddit (about a year ago) and wanted to look for the equivalent of r/Ireland here, I was met with about 5 or 6 different communities (spread across various instances). You couldn’t really call any of them active, occasionally someone would post a link to a news article but there was no engagement.
Things have improved since then but I definitely agree with your point.
We used to play UNO. It started with 2-3 people and ended up with being 5-6 people playing and more watching. It was loads of fun
At my last company, we would walk around with our laptops. People would just assume we were looking for a meeting room or had something important to do.
I can’t quite remember what we did at our desks specifically. However, I do remember a guy I worked with used to browse Wikipedia and Tinder.
Than you for such detailed response! I find it incredibly useful to pickup on extra nuggets of information even if the question was not directly applicable to me.
Unfortunately ChatGPT didn’t listen, would have been great if it worked.
Am I the only one who didn’t read “cult” first?
Not sure if it’s sold outside of Ireland but “Murphy’s” is really good, and of course, Guinness (if you’re into stouts)