Sweet thank you
I’ve been to the on out in Hillsboro, its pretty good the Blackberry is my go to. My Wife likes the Sweet Cream.
They are busy though.
After seeing what r/pics and r/gifs are doing I doubt voting would work out in his favor anyway. A surprising about of the user base is behind the protest.
My university used to pave these paths any time they did new construction. They’d put in the normal walkway when a new building went up, wait till the next year and then pave the places where people naturally wanted walkways.
I got an account on beehaw, but quickly left. I understood what they’re trying to do, it’s just poorly executed.
We were all expecting that, I’m surprised that they didn’t do it earlier.
That got an actual chuckle out of me.
Honestly yes, if Reddit steps back and Apollo stays around I’d probably go back to it. While Lemmy is a good alternative IOS support is limited with Mlem and the communities aren’t as large. I’d still probably use Lemmy but less often.
I loved ace combat, I can never get my play station set up with modern TVs. I need to find an old CRT.
I always find myself going back to Civ V. I can lose weeks playing that game.
Received, and ignored.
As a new person… no commit. Other than I feel obligated to not lurk after reading the plea to not lurk from other posr.
Ditto
I spend my weekend thinking about the things I should be doing on the weekend.
Thank you for the explanation, I’m having a hard time understanding how an “unprofitable” business has managed to stay afloat this long.
Agreed, I don’t know why Reddit is pushing to go public. Personally I don’t see the value in a business that admits that they aren’t profitable, but that raises the question if they aren’t making money how as Reddit operated for so long? The upside to them going public is that they’ll have to start publishing financial statements and we’ll get to just how much money the “unprofitable” business is making.
I expect we’ll see a lot of this with he Reddit drama going on, eventually it’ll stabilize.
Are there any guarantees for Reddit that things that are deleted are actually deleted from their servers? One of their biggest assets is the data that they hold, If I were in their position and trying to maintain some value with a significant portion of my user base leaving scorched earth I’d be holding on to that data just removing it from the public facing application.
What kind of dog is she, our dog looks the same bit all we were told from the shelter is “hound”.