Op does not seem neither belligerent nor antagonistic to me. Maybe rude in their initial statement, but they’ve been interacting with the comments in a perfectly civil way.
Most definitely not an “awful example to set” in any way.
Op does not seem neither belligerent nor antagonistic to me. Maybe rude in their initial statement, but they’ve been interacting with the comments in a perfectly civil way.
Most definitely not an “awful example to set” in any way.
Motherfuckers really will downvote a non-stupid question on !nostupidquestions
Haven’t used kagi, but ecosia is another bing fronted.
It’s duckduckgo, but the profits from the ads are used to plant trees.
If you need/want something like kagi, only kagi exists at the moment. There is nothing comparable in quality and features
If you still want to throw some money at them, they have a store where you can buy some merch and plant a tree
It’s already in there! Fourth column, third row
Source?
That’s my client of choice
AC Valhalla. I’ve recently finished odyssey and I wanted to play another “turn off the brain checklist open world game”
It’s very rough around the edges (bugs, clipping, clunky movement) and it got me frustrated time and time again, but the thing I’m disliking the most are the frequent and mandatory raids. If I wanted a full fledged action game I’d be playing wukong or some shit.
Enabling insta-kill assassination from the accessibility options is what’s been saving the game for me.
I’m also considering about lowering the difficulty. The second hardest one is making the enemies unreasonably tanky, which does not bode well with the shittiest healing system I have ever seen in a videogame.
I’ll add another one: get to them from the miconids village, do not engage them from the lower ground by the lake.
Once you’re done that, destroy the stairs first and push them down afterwards. You won’t believe how easy this fight gets.
Or you know, you could always lower the difficulty. No shame in doing so
I bought crosscode some months ago on GOG and I’m slowly working through it.
I’m constantly amazed at how it feels like a grand AAA mmorpg. The complexity of the maps is astounding (sometimes at a fault) and there is a lot of stuff to do. A tales of grindea on steroids, if you will
Strongly recommended if you enjoy the genre
I bought it some time ago but I kind not got into it, and it saddens me because I only hear good things about it.
Any advice?
Printing on Linux has been seamless for me so far, unlike windows and macos
Yeah, Earthbound was definitely the major inspiration for masterpieces such as Undertale and Omori
Unfortunately, the vast majority of people do not give a single fuck and they will use whatever is preinstalled on their device
Many distros are better than ubuntu nowdays. PopOS happens to be one of those
Neo launcher
Absolutely agree. It’s counterintuitive, but waking up earlier than you need to and start your day slowly actually makes you feel more rested and calm (provided you’ve still slept sufficiently)
Kaspersky has faced controversy over allegations that it has engaged with the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB)—ties which the company has actively denied. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security banned Kaspersky products from all government departments on September 13, 2017. In October 2017, subsequent reports alleged that hackers working for the Russian government stole confidential data from the home computer of an American National Security Agency contractor via Kaspersky antivirus software. Kaspersky denied the allegations, reporting that the software had detected Equation Group malware samples which it uploaded to its servers for analysis in its normal course of operation.[13] The company has since announced commitments to increased accountability, such as soliciting independent reviews and verification of its software’s source code, and announcing that it would migrate some of its core infrastructure for foreign customers from Russia to Switzerland. In November 2020, Kaspersky finished relocating the data of its customers from Russia to Switzerland.[14][15] The company has also opened multiple transparency centers in Switzerland, Brazil, Canada, Spain and Malaysia which allow state agencies, government experts and regulators to review its source code.[16][17]
Where our golds at though? Kind strangers, this way!