Worth noting that iirc the lorax doesn't actually do anything except speak up for those who needed help and protection. He didn't win immediately but his efforts weren't in vain. The lorax (or at least the movie?) shows you many ways you can be a part of changing the world. You dont have to be Ted, you don't have to be the Lorax, you don't have to be granny norma, or Ted's love interest, or the people who spoke up first when Ted planted the tree. All of these people made the world better with their own contribution. You should consider it, though.
Short of one window with multiple columns functioning as one long list of your games I fail to see how you want steam to act even more like a desktop application UI wise.
Software Engineering with discussion about the field's history and how that knowledge contextualizes modern practices I am teaching my students. Mainline curriculum in python -> C# -> Rust across multiple years ending in a year of guided study and some kind of project that demonstrates what you've learned and what you want to do with your skills.
Um... firefox has this feature... did you not try googling what you wanted before posting about it on the internet?
Like seriously, open your firefox app, turn on your brain, open "Settings" and see the settings youre here begging for under "Tabs -> Close Tabs" (ff mobile models tab lifecycle differently but will gladly auto close tabs) and under "HOMEPAGE -> Opening Screen"
If you're still confused, you need to remember that on mobile they tend to obfuscate the actual program lifecycle from the user since mobile software tends to follow a different set of design paradigms and objectives. Firefox the mobile app wants your experience to be seamless between the app getting backgrounded, killed, deep slept, etc.
Your post contents themselves deserve a response, but to answer the question: I've never bothered thinking life is unfair, I learned this lesson early on as an eldest sibling (and it seems like a lot of other eldest siblings I talk to are slightly more in tune with unfairness than non eldest siblings, but this is anecdotal and I'm not willing to defend this observation)
Life is obviously filled with things that feel fair and unfair, but ultimately fairness is not part of the rules of our reality so there's no need to determine its presence or abscence.
To speak to your own response, it's super easy and feels great to imagine those who we feel have wronged us have been suffering ever since we left their lives. Rarely does this ever actually play out that way, nor is it healthy to rely on this line of thinking to find closure, peace, satisfaction, etc. It is more realistic to expect their lives to be fulfilling their goals on some level, and its likely they aren't miserable at all.
I have no idea what you're saying after the first section, but there are people out there all along the "is okay with a non ideal partner" scale out there. You can have your flaws and have a partner and a healthy relationship, and anyone worth your time will consider any progress you have already made, even if that's not always enough to make you the one they want to be with.
I don't want to make any further statements as this is already too general and assumption heavy, and you do not deserve to be told what to do without an ounce of actual attention to your life. I can guaranteo you're not alone in the problems you are facing.
I've always found riding the waves of life with attention to my goals has worked in a way that leaves me generally satisfied with the process.
So... that leads me to think 45% of travelers having incomes over 100k this thanksgiving means they're underrepresented and thus are not dominating travel in the slightest?
The disingenuous phrasing is like "pro life" instead of what it is, "anti-choice"