Remember the days when a story like this was shocking? Now it’s not even a surprise, nevermind a shock.
It is different. The old Photoshop process took a lot of time. Now an image can be manipulated incredibly quickly and spread almost as fast before anyone has time to do anything about it.
That theory works if you’re only buying things you need. I know people that buy stuff they don’t really need and/or never use because it was cheap on Amazon.
I don’t understand some people who swear by it. If there’s really something I need by the next day, I probably need it the same day and will just get it myself at a store.
Skipped over the original Mozilla?
It was reported that it was a 2cm wound. That’s not insignificant.
Was he supposedly hit in the ear? If so, how did nobody behind him get hit? Given the angle they would have had to shoot from to miss everyone else, it seems like they would have had to be down in the crowd below and it should be obvious who did it.
Maybe try Napster: https://www.napster.com/ Sounds a bit like a joke, but it’s not. It used to be Rhapsody, but was re-branded.
As a Linux user, check out Strawberry. The name isn’t great, but the player makes up for it
The modern day bullet proof vest (using kevlar) was invented by a pizza delivery driver.
You can still be an illiterate hillbilly AND be insane.
The construction workers that died is fucking awful. The traffic situation won’t be great, but at least she’s alive with a job to go to.
That’s mainly the internet, not just Lemmy
People would be able to see you filming and maybe decide not to use that machine
“Not me, so I don’t care who gets shot” great attitude
This is quite the stealth ad. It seemed like a genuine post at first.
You can search for it on webcompat, linked to from Report an issue with a website that I use. I did a search within there and it may be related to or the same bug as this.
Do you know if this is actually been reported as a bug? I’ve seen it myself, but just got annoyed and didn’t report it or anything.
It will run Doom at 60 frames per year