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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 15th, 2023

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  • unless you see the uber car circling around you on the map, then canceling the ride and cashing in the “cancelation fee”

    That’s a relatively new phenomenon as people have learned how to game the system. The reliability of Uber when they first launched was complete night and day.

    yes, uber was faster to adapt it than traditional taxi industry, but they are not doing it for your blue eyes, they are doing it for profit and they do lot of shady stuff to achieve it.

    I never said otherwise. I was merely providing an example of why Uber gained adoption early on. The service was materially better than what taxi companies were delivering at the time in many places. I experienced that first hand.


  • Tracking, arrival timer and an easy app.

    The fact that they would actually show up.

    Where I live, before Uber you needed to call the cab company at least an hour before you wanted to get anywhere (in a city that you can get pretty much anywhere in 15 minutes). The dispatcher would tell you someone will be there in 20 minutes and, if you were lucky, somebody might show up in 45. Before Uber, there was more than one occasion where I ended up stranded downtown until 4 or 5am after the bars had closed at 3:00.

    Being able to request a ride, having someone reliably show up, and show up reasonably close to when they said they would was an absolute game changer at the time.






  • commandar@lemmy.worldtoA Boring Dystopia@lemmy.worldSigh.
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    7 months ago

    Their business model is buying overstock items from other retailers and then reselling it highly discounted. It’s the reason you’ll find things that are Walmart, Target, etc store brands there.

    Basically, it’s anything that aged out in inventory elsewhere that the original retailer no longer wanted taking up shelf space for whatever reason.



  • Part of what makes all the hatred for Common Core math so hilarious to me is that when I finally saw what they were teaching, it was a moment of “holy shit, this is exactly how I use and do math in real life.” It’s full of contextualizing with a focus on teaching mental shortcuts that allow you to quickly land on ballpark answers. I think it’s absolutely wonderful.

    But it’s so foreign to the rote manner that a lot of parents were taught that many of them have a hard time grasping it, and get angry as a result.


  • The article cites the opinion of an unnamed author of an unnamed “image encyclopedia.” Not really what I’d call definitive, which was the point.

    In my circles back then, soft G was predominant. I wouldn’t cite that as evidence of a One True Pronunciation either.

    There has always been debate about it. Hard G has certainly become predominant, but declaring that people that prefer soft G “weren’t on the internet back then” is revisionist at best.