OpenBoard is FOSS and doesn't track you. You can disable the user dictionary if you consider that tracking.
I know how to proofread. The vast majority of the time it chooses the word I meant, and it's trivial to fix the mistakes. Without it, I can't get through two words without a typo, as evidenced by my original comment.
Caring that someone else requires autocorrect to be an effective communicator and calling their usage of it "very strange" is dick thing to say.
No it's not. You totally lost the plot of their post. The very first thing they said was, "how much should you really be going for max coins, in a multiplayer race?" And then you went on and on about time trials.
What you can do is increase your chances dramatically.
"Dramatically". You are an expert exaggerator! In the chaos and RNG of a multiplayer race, 10 coins will not increase your chances of winning "dramatically". smh
Believe it or not, I occasionally use FFMPEG inside Termux on my phone. Is it easy? Hell no. You have to read the manual to do the most basic thing. But it's really powerful and it's FOSS.
Usually I just cut part of a video down to a few seconds of maybe crop off some black bars. That kind of thing. Or extract the audio to an MP3. (If it's a song you're going for, you can snag just the audio from YouTube with yt-dlp without the need for FFMPEG.)
If it had a front-end to help with finding timestamps and crop dimensions, that'd be great.
Oh, and I occasionally convert a video from webm to mp4 to send it to my friends on iPhone since Signal for iPhone can't seem to play webm videos. That kind of thing is pretty quick and easy.
Yeah, I think so. I downloaded the recommended app, connected to the recommended server, added a channel, tried to ask my question, and BAM! That was it.
Here's a critical feature: Matrix bans people using a VPN. Fuck that. I joined a channel for the first time, said "Hello", and was instantly banned for "Spam".
I have to use a VPN because I get my Internet from tethering my phone using EasyTether to make it look like phone data, and connecting to stuff like Windows Update would make it really obvious I'm doing so.
It's just an image CDN. It's used by people running websites to offload the generation of thumbnails (and other smaller sizes) of large images onto a different server (the image CDN's servers). Images can be resized on-the-fly based on the user's device and screen size instead of premaking multiple versions of an image in some program like Photoshop.
It has nothing to do with how an image is presented other than to change the native size. It will have literally the same effect as just uploading a larger or smaller version in the first place. Nothing more.
That's exactly the point. There's nothing pedantic about acknowledging the difference. "Fewer" is for a countable number of things like "pollutants", and "less" is for uncountable things like "pollution". It's not hard.
It wouldn't matter. Deletes on reddit (and all social media sites) are soft deletes. The data is not actually deleted. They can still sell it even though it's in a "deleted" state, as they have a perpetual license to use anything you shared on their site in any way they see fit.
In addition, they are actively restoring deleted comments when people use any of the various reddit account wiping tools.
My physical keyboard buttons are a liiiiittle bigger than my on-screen ones. WTF is wrong with you?