British crosswords are MORE cryptic than American ones? I can’t consistently solve the LA Times or NYT crossword after Wednesday; I probably wouldn’t be able to do any British puzzles.
I get access to the NYT puzzles app through my library card, which has a very long backlog and lots of packs, so that may be an avenue worth pursuing.
I think it already is. I think we just need to send a Calendly to see when everyone’s got some free time and we can burn this mother down.
I honestly don’t see a reason why anybody would want something like that
Famous last words.
I’ve also switched to duckduckgo as my default search engine, but I do find myself falling back to google more often than I’d like because duckduckgo can’t find what I’m searching for.
lol, I would totally archive and deprecate like 80% of my node modules if I got a CVE without a second thought.
I feel similarly, except I wish more users were interacted with my sports communities too. Guess it’s a “have your cake and eat it too” kind of problem.
The United States of America
My country’s national anthem is just one long stupid rhetorical question that’s impossible to sing. It’s super embarrassing at international sporting events when it’s consistently the worst one there.
I was just sharing my experience with running the communities for the three clubs in my city. I look forward to hearing about your experience with running all those – I’m sure you’ll do much better than I and much more efficiently.
Just doing a few soccer teams and a league – it’s a lot of time and a lot of infrastructure
I added a user story to the site to reflect this idea! I can’t promise we’ll ship it, but I can promise we’ll think about it.
I’m trying to get a team together to do something similar which you can join if you’re interested: https://dougs-digital-garden.netlify.app/notes/trailsapp/
Shower 4 lyfe
Me, developing a headless component library:
You’re probably not gonna have zsh either, though, but I wouldn’t recommend using sh as your shell on your personal dev machine 🤷♂️
The fediverse is less like Twitter and more like email. You sign up for email through a provider, like Gmail or Outlook, and they have control over your access to the other users and pay the costs of running your hardware, the same way you sign up with a particular domain on Lemmy or Mastodon. Like email, you have an inbox that receives messages, and communities are like email groups you join and send messages to. And, like email, it’s based on standards that everyone has agreed on through a group called the w3 consortium.
Not “millionaires”, it’s “millions” like “lots of people”.