I did a tandem jump at my local skydiving place, and we hit the ground much much harder than I would have expected. I was bruised up for a month.
My tandem partner said: "Sorry about that. They gave us the worst parachute."
(⊙_⊙')
I did a tandem jump at my local skydiving place, and we hit the ground much much harder than I would have expected. I was bruised up for a month.
My tandem partner said: "Sorry about that. They gave us the worst parachute."
(⊙_⊙')
I mean... parties and sex are pretty cool though.
I liked that I could get loud bursts of static in real-time!!
The chatter identified as "Paul" said "Hippo". I don't think the person above you made a bad assumption.
That checks out. I live near a college town where for 2-3 years there was a rash of "college riots" where police tear-gassed everyone in the streets when they felt it was getting out of hand. The solution to keeping the students from rioting ended up being... stop sending cops out there. Everything was fine.
As arch users, we would never need the help of some low-level IT person though. That would be ridiculous.
I remember back in 2017, I didn't really need any big desktop apps anymore. All I used was Salesforce, Netsuite, O365, Postman... I asked my company to just give me a Chromebook. Now I hate Chromebooks and I could very much do my job on a Linux distro mainly using web apps if needed.
My IT dept would never allow it because they can't install security software on it. Obviously I'd be pretty safe from malware, but they'd have to trust that I set up firewalls and password protection because they couldn't enforce a group policy, and their data loss prevention tools wouldn't work.
Yeah, don't do this, and you should be fine.
Never at any time in history in any part of the world has there been affordable spacious housing in a city. This isn't something unique to the modern US nor is it the result of government.
If the average person wants to live in a walkable area, they live in a small place. That's how it works. It's a city. People can even raise a family there. The option exists. It sounds like you don't like that option. That's not anyone else's decision being forced on you.
I don’t want to sound flippant, but there are places to live in the US where you can walk to things. People choose to live outside cities and old town areas because it’s cheaper and bigger.
I guess what I’m trying to say is that this isn’t some nebulous countrywide “It’s everyone else’s fault” thing. People can and do choose to live close to things. We choose what we want.
Oh no!
Anyway...
Baby... it'll blow your mind.