And if you kept pressing it, it would tell you off. Back when even installers had more soul than their games do now.
And if you kept pressing it, it would tell you off. Back when even installers had more soul than their games do now.
No, it’s a complicated process involving birds and bees.
It may work for a subset of the Dragon Age fans, but the old school DA:O CRPG fans are left to look elsewhere.
You should be aware that “maintaining” that PC may be more than you expect. Just this weekend I had to help my aunt because the bank’s website had a “big thing in front of it” that she couldn’t get rid of. It turned out to be a cookie banner that was just a bit too big for her laptop screen, and the buttons to close it were out of the frame.
That’s just an example of course, but depending on the person(s) using it, there may need to be someone at hand to help at all times.
Violations of privacy. Microsoft has that too though, so unless Google has wallpapers they need to step up their game.
As a late Gen X, I was completely lost. So, I guess it’s official: I don’t get your generation.
Ah thank you. I was unaware of the matrix protocol.
I’m obviously out of the loop, because I don’t know. Can someone explain?
That’s another benefit: no more meetings.
I’ve been a proponent of this for ages. It makes no sense to cross some imaginary line and suddenly time shifts. Time should change constantly as you move east or west, up or down. Everyone has their own personal time, which is constantly updated.
Bonus: no more daylight savings switch.
Lotus 1-2-3 […] I didn’t learn spreadsheets
What do you mean? Lotus 1-2-3 was a spreadsheet. It was THE spreadsheet.
I just say I was doing something else for a moment. It’s not my fault if they assume that something else was work related.
Exactly! Even the indicator light of my speakers bothers me during long nightly sessions. I want to see the screen, nothing else.
You mean the thing that Opera had in the 90s, and Vivaldi since inception?
That’s a misconception. Farmers lobbied heavily against DST. Their work does not abide by the clock; they milk when cows need milking, and they harvest when there’s enough light, no matter what some clock says.
In Europe, DST as we know it now was first introduced by Germany during WW1 to preserve coal, then abandoned after the war, and widely adopted again in the 70s. In the US it was established federally in the 60s.
This is all glossing over a lot of regional differences and older history. But yeah, US farmers were very much against the idea.
governme-
nts
I didn’t count them, but wired itself has a very impressive list of “partners” in their cookie disclaimer too.
college third job
How has this society not collapsed?
If the Internet has taught me anything, they’re 42 and 69.