Linux, politics, and the occasional meme that doesn’t fit in either of the other two categories.
Linux, politics, and the occasional meme that doesn’t fit in either of the other two categories.
It dis-assembled the computer!
Oh, we had something like this in college. The vendor would load up the… well, actually, it was more like a big version of those little coolers you see in the checkout line in grocery stores—the ones with the sodas and stuff in them. Anyway, the vendor would load them up every couple days. It’d have sandwiches, salads, puddings (which were actually really popular), sodas, Gatorade, water, and a bunch of other stuff. If we wanted something, we would just get it out, scan the barcode on the scanner attached to the handle, tap our phones or cards to pay, and be on our way.
CANNED BREAD
Since you mentioned it, I’m obligated to link this clip.
Wasn’t that proven to just be a myth?
Just an FYI for the RSS thing: if a Bluesky account is set to be viewable to logged-in users only, its RSS feed will not work. It only works if the profile is viewable publicly without logging in.
In general, yeah. Private torrent trackers tend to focus on specific types of content. Some might focus on cartoons. Some might focus on anime. Some focus on books. Some focus on video games. Public trackers, on the other hand, generally focus on everything, which, of course, means they won’t have a lot of the older or more niche stuff, and they might be lacking in one or more categories (music, anime, books, TV, etc.).
It’s also much less likely that a torrent on a private tracker will die because most private trackers enforce certain rules about seeding and because the people there are generally much more into seeding than most people on a public tracker. (Probably most people on public trackers simply download what they need and stop before seeding anything back.)
Private trackers are also typically the first (and sometimes only) places to get scene releases. Scene releases, which are done by private groups, are usually higher quality than stuff on public trackers. Sometimes, they leak onto a public tracker, but not usually.
Eh, Aniwave was a pretty big one for the anime community. From what I understand, it’s the one most people fled to after KissAnime was taken down. Aside from that, I’ve never heard of any of the other sites they mentioned.
Me waiting for the next “mothership” to pop up so I can use it:
Aniwave (formerly known as 9anime) was, from what I understand, the site most people fled to after KissAnime bit the dust.
They didn’t show full episodes from the show. Rather, it was clips from the show organized around specific characters, themes, or moments from the show. Sometimes (not often, but sometimes), they would use voice lines from the show as well.
For example, (Avatar: The Last Airbender spoilers)
they had clips and music about Iroh. It included, of course, Leaves From the Vine with audio and clips of Iroh singing it. I cried through that whole segment. I don’t think there was a dry eye in that theater.
For the encore they made an entire song out of
the Secret Tunnel song :::.
deleted by creator
Twitter has World Bank ads?
Tickets to Avatar: The Last Airbender in Concert and the merch I bought at it. I spent something like $200 in total, but it was WORTH. EVERY. PENNY.
“The movie is good as long as you ignore the movie.”
Oh, yeah, I forgot about that setting. Since that specific setting says, “If you deselect Undetermined, you will not see most content,” I just assumed most people didn’t select a language when they post. Since I still have “Undetermined” selected, I’d assumed I’d still see some foreign language posts.
They said, “You can run, but you can’t hide!”
I don’t speak German. I just have Google Translate installed on my phone and just selected the text and hit “translate”.
… What German posts?
Wasn’t ten years ago just Chrome, though?
I think you mean 20 years ago.