

Most people aren’t choosing to enable OneDrive; it’s enabled by default, and not obvious how to disable.
Just some guy saying some things


Most people aren’t choosing to enable OneDrive; it’s enabled by default, and not obvious how to disable.
Step 1: Sell shirt that requires new bras
Step 2: Sell new bras
Step 3: Profit?


Neptune looking real blue there as well.


A Falcon 9 does a pretty good job.


People are too used to using the downvote button as an “I dislike this” button, and that carries over here. Solid unpopular opinion though; I wholeheartedly disagree.
Our girlfriend


Some of these hardly qualify as fireworks; they look more like straight up bombs.


Popular opinion, downvoted.


What browser extension are you referring to? I don’t see a link. And yeah, they’re not the worst place to donate money to but they have plenty already.


Didn’t see this earlier but another thread gave a good summary: https://piefed.social/comment/9505729


Cool, but this article looks like AI slop.


I pay for several domains, as well as mailbox.org for email. Aside from that, nothing.
Article referencing data source
To make these charts, Rudder looked at the preferences of OkCupid users. As you can see, a woman’s taste in men typically evolves as she ages, while a man’s taste in women stays the same no matter how old he gets.


If this isn’t just an artifact of the way data was collected, I suspect it’s not because Linux users are more likely to install alternative launchers, but because they’re much less tolerant of non-FOSS software in general.
Anecdotally, most Windows users I know use a custom launcher, but they use proprietary ones like CurseForge or Feather (both of which show advertisements; something no self-respecting Linux user would accept, but which has been normalized in Windows).


I can’t see this being useful; the amount of energy generated is just so far below what’s practical to use. An equivalent size of solar panels would be cheaper and provide orders of magnitude more energy even when it’s cloudy.
It’s an interesting idea though, and cool that they were able to harvest any power at all.


This is also true in America, but only if you’re not wealthy.
Sort your data into stuff you absolutely need to keep (personal files and such) and stuff you’d be okay with losing (less important files, device backups, downloads you can redownload, etc). Then only back up the former. As for backup medium, ServerPartDeals often has some pretty good deals on storage; they were selling refurbished 12TB drives for $80 a pop a while back.