BootLoop @ BootLoop @sh.itjust.works Posts 0Comments 28Joined 1 wk. ago
This is the same as me. Outside of work, though, I'm the cat in the meme.
I thought it was backwards because of the Es and I was trying to make sense of SKEETNA
It's more enjoyable is the main thing. It's more fun to drive a manual car to many people and that's their appeal. There are a few other advantages to it as well. They're generally more reliable and have better fuel economy and performance than automatics that were offered until the 2010s.
This wasn't taught to me either but this is the best thing for teaching others. I've explained this to a few people before that were struggling to learn and it made the process much easier.
Not just Fix It Again Tony
Copilot does do reviews in Github now. And they're decent actually, in my experience.
Thunder has keyword filters. These help but aren't perfect.
I had this when I made a new account on sh.itjust.works. Kept trying over a few days and then just manually copied settings over in the end.
I regularly drank from a stream in Canada as well haha. There was a stream fed by a spring near where we lived that we tested and was clean. We'd then fill up jugs right from the spring to drink at home.
Yeah this is annoying.
"It's your lucky day!"
I believe Piefed is designed to federate with existing Lemmy instances which means it's working already.
I see Piefed posts in Thunder.
There definitely still are. I know a few personally.
Helicopters drop water bombs on wildfires.
This is a good post.
Where are you from? I'm Canadian. If you wore a jacket that would mean it's cool outside. Houses are kept warm so you'd be too warm wearing the jacket inside so you'd take it off at the door unless you were just running inside quickly. Shoes is strange to me. Never wanted to leave shoes on in someone's house.
I switched to using CBC's Mauril from Duolingo, and it's been good for me. However, it's only available to Canadian residents (or VPN users) and it's only for French. So it worked for me but obviously that covers a small subset of Duolingo users.
Is there places in the world where you'd leave your coat or shoes on when entering? Genuine question. Hats I can see being a traditional thing at least for the older generations.
Slam one in the car and race to your destination before you fall asleep.
Or what?
Me typing a long winded comment on Lemmy.