![](/static/253f0d9b/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/170721ad-9010-470f-a4a4-ead95f51f13b.png)
It’s because the first time doesn’t always work. I swear, sometimes it doesn’t!
It’s because the first time doesn’t always work. I swear, sometimes it doesn’t!
The “Blocked since install” stat on uBlockOrigin is always an eye-opener.
Yes, this exactly! I still cannot fathom how Discord took off. It offers literally no advantages over forums, and introduces some massive disadvantages.
I often do this, but I always hit Ctrl-S before running it again. Shamefully, this probably works about 10% of the time. Does that technically count as changing nothing?
It’s so absurd. It feels like half of the websites out there actively don’t want me to visit them.
This would have been a hilarious Dexter gag.
You know that some guest DJ is going to play Rick Astley all hour long.
This is a wonderful idea! I’ll definitely be following this project.
I use one every day. I could probably write an essay on why, but one reason sticks out: tactile buttons. It’s great to be able to skip a track without having to poke around on a screen to find the virtual button.
I love the small-town feel of it. It almost feels like the old-school forums, where you felt like part of a community.
The relative sparsity of comments is a major negative, but I’m hopeful that that’ll change with time.
And you’d better believe that they’ll have twice-a-year price hikes, Netflix-style.
“You wouldn’t download a car.”
“You wouldn’t hit mute during the commercials on a television broadcast.”
They should add a Bill Gates racecar to Super Tux Kart. It could be covered with ads, and so bloated that it never actually wins a race.
Nice community idea! I’ll definitely be subscribing.
I’d buy it!
In general, or on Lemmy specifically? Because I’ve definitely noticed that some comment replies on Lemmy seem to completely miss the point of the parent comment.
Even though I was in the prime age group for Digg, I shockingly never even heard of it until after I became a Reddit user and heard tales of its demise.
StumbleUpon was my main Internet resource during those years. I still miss it.
A tactile keyboard. There was a time when I could text with my eyes closed (literally). Now it takes me 30 seconds to “type” out a text that should take < 10 seconds.
Privacy isn’t dead, but it will be soon because those of us who seriously care about it are the 0.001%.