How is Meta acting anti competitive? I am not defending them, just actually curious. For Microsoft, Alphabet and Apple it makes sense because they control the platforms.
How is Meta acting anti competitive? I am not defending them, just actually curious. For Microsoft, Alphabet and Apple it makes sense because they control the platforms.
Yes, usually games with anti cheat, like Destiny 2. Although it’s way better nowadays, mostly thanks to Valve.
He probably means the people who riot, destroy cars, homes and businesses of average people.
Shooting them is wrong and this guy probably is a dickhead, yes, but a lot of normal, average citizens will agree to this.
Edit: To clarify, I mean that‘s how the right get‘s people on their side. Rioting will just result in more people agreeing with people like this guy, even if the message is absurd.
They can use your bank account for for example money laundering.
Edit: Or your identity to create new bank accounts of course.
In Africa men with beards are just men without beards with beards.
That‘s probably because HTML doesn‘t actually has any logic. You basically just need to remember things and what to put where. You should try a programming language, which actually has logic and is therefore easier to understand (imo). The easiest language you can start with is probably python.
Some people just do it this way. This doesn‘t mean they don‘t have fun. I noticed this happens with books too; people buy books and then track how many they‘ve read, set goals etc. Some people think it‘s stupid, but for some it‘s fun.
Ich kann verstehen, warum Menschen sowas kaufen, aber ich kann auch absolut verstehen wenn man es sich nicht kaufen will.
Definitely Arrival
Mate, maybe you should just go a therapist. That‘s their job, you don‘t need an AI for this.
Yea, but adding features increases profit, because more people will spend more time on your platform and maybe even subscribe to premium.
It‘s pissing me off, because Reddit invests more time into removing features, instead of adding new, highly requested ones.
Will look into it. Thanks for the recommendations!
These look interesting. Thanks!
I actually liked Odyssey way more than Origins. Haven‘t even played Origins through, simply didn‘t hook me.
I was using Apollo for years. When the change happened I thought „well, maybe it isn’t that bad“, used the official app for a few days and now I am here. And honestly, I am using Memmy now and it feels almost exactly like Apollo on Reddit.
I usually check the subreddit redditmobile to see if they actually fixed the app.
Edit: But yea, honestly I probably won‘t go back to Reddit. Lemmy seems to be a great alternative.
YouTube at least recommends really small content creators. I sometimes get video recommendations with just 1-10 views. With shorts it‘s the same.
Safari on iOS supports extensions out of the box. You can just install adguard or something else and won‘t have any ads.
There are also third party browsers, which yes, use WebKit, but also can block ads.