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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)RE
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2 yr. ago

  • It was briefly syndicated, I think; I watched the first season on the local ABC affiliate. In my area a tiny little TV station in the middle of a cornfield got the rights to TNG and I honestly think that's what kept that station afloat. The affiliates fought over DS9 and VOY. There was a UPN station in my region but it was too week for me to watch it OTA.

  • What's happened is the US judicial system has decided that if you make a fireman or policeman legally liable, then everyone has to be. Meaning if you see that your neighbor is in an emergency situation, it's not enough to call 911, you have to respond and can be found liable, if emergency responders are.

    It's stupid.

  • Oh, I don't know. There's lots of towns across the US that only came to be because it was a water stop. And in those towns the tracks still exist and the people living there commute to work.

    The little town I grew up in had a trainyard and that's why it existed. The yard is gone but there's still active train lines going through town.

  • Obligatory I use Arch, BTW

    But dependencies for proprietary software are part of why I use the Steam Flatpak. It doesn't matter what other community and AUR packages are installed, the Steam Flatpak is unaffected by that for the most part.

    I really do think something like Flatpak could lead to more Linux adoption. Package management played an important role but sometimes it can be a hindrance IMHO

  • I was looking at Twitter earlier, and my feed was full of antivaxxers, election deniers, some anti-abortion activist that claims that Planned Parenthood is involved in sex trafficking, and even 9/11 deniers.

    Twitter is a dead man walking

  • I'd argue it's not as extreme as you might think it is. I live just down the road from a town that only exists and grows, because it's next to a major interstate. Population less than 17,000 but I swear there's enough fast food places that the whole population could go out to eat at the same time. They all complain about not being able to find help yet there's always at least one fast food place under construction. There's a suburban sized mall sitting empty because all the businesses moved to strip malls. Two Super Walmart buildings; one of them is a megachurch now. There's empty strip malls too but they keep building more. There's almost zero effort put into efficient traffic flow. Then you go past the interstate retail hellscape and it's a weird mix of people in houses that look like upper middle class suburbanites, and single wide trailers whose owners look like they're one car repair expense on their Kia from being homeless.

    The town I grew up in is like that, too.

    Just stop anywhere that has a bunch of restaurants listed on the interstate signs, it's the same story in all of them. Faceless corporations dumping food places where they can.

    And that doesn't even get into the TIF scam all these towns are using. One local town declared an area full of well-kept lawyers' offices as "blighted" and was going to let the lawyers use TIF to

  • "Starter home", I'm not sure how much more disdain I could have for that title. I bought a home in 2003 that would probably be called that now. It was a typical size for when it was built in 1982 but of course homes must be bigger now. My wife has a friend who has a home that's nearly double the size yet she's jealous of all the storage space we have. There's this trend of building homes with huge main spaces and I don't understand why.

    I understand if people end up having to move for work of course, and if the home they're in is literally too small for their family, I just don't understand moving just because a bigger house is available.

  • Decades ago I was at the Visitors Center for the Western band of Cherokee and this woman was giving a talk next to a campfire, and the wind kept shifting. She kept moving and finally coughed and then apologized for the smoke blowing in everyone's faces.

    There was another guy there who was clearly hitting on her, and he said, "they say smoke follows beauty." With comedic timing the wind shifted and blew the smoke towards him, and she, quick as lightning, said, "Smoke follows wind."

    (And in case you don't know, in American English when someone is "windy" they talk a lot and don't say much)

  • Glancing through their post history, probably not

    Honestly if I was in the same boat, I probably would, too. Mint is so ridiculously good. Here's hoping they can make the Wayland transition.