Can’t do it, you win
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Soylent and water. Food for an actual meal is different every day though, I like variety
I’m not very social, I usually only talk to people I already know which makes it hard to meet someone new
Ragincloo@lemmy.oneto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Do you have a favorite toilet at work and why is that?
51·2 years agoThere’s three choices on my floor. One is acceptable and my preference cuz it’s close and clean. One is awful, it’s dirty and one of the stalls has a broken door that doesn’t close. The third which I never use is my favorite, I leave I as a mysterious luxury bathroom in my head and I’ll never use it in case that isn’t the reality of it. I like to think it has bidets and hot towels to dry my hands, sometimes even an attendant
The statement seemed to me to say it should be their choice and not a “guardian”. How are you confused by the response above?
Ragincloo@lemmy.oneto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Why is it frowned upon here to 'steal' content from reddit?
181·2 years agoIt’s kinda beat seeing a whole wall of automated reddit reposts from bots, nobody ever comments on them. But I get that there’s some content we may wanna see among it. However, I don’t like seeing links directly to Reddit, I’m not trying to give them traffic at this time
Ragincloo@lemmy.oneto
Technology@lemmy.world•An Instacart customer said she discovered the app's higher prices cost her nearly $100 after accidentally seeing the store's paper receiptEnglish
71·2 years agoSame on GrubHub. Individual item markup of 1 or 2 dollars each, delivery fee, and 10% service fee (on the sum of order + delivery fee + taxes). So what would be 20 in store becomes something like 25 (food) + 1.50 taxes + 4 delivery fee + 3.05 service fee, then tipping on that 33.55 which brings what should have been 20-22 dollars as pickup (or 28 pickup through GrubHub) up to 38-40 dollars minimum. Damn near double

Idk about that, maybe indefinite copyrights would be but limited term is entirely fair. Like imagine you spend 5 years and $50M to develop something (random numbers here), then the next day someone just copies it and sells it cheaper since they had no overhead in copying your product. There’s no incentive to create if all it does is put you in debt, so we do need copyrights if we want things. However Pokemon came out in 96, that’s 28 years. There’s been very little innovation in their games since. And seeing as Digimon wasn’t sued it’s not about the monsters, it’s about the balls. But those balls haven’t changed in almost three decades so I don’t think the really have a case to complain