Newer Simpsons has actually been really good. Poorhouse Rock was a shockingly good episode about how lucky Homer was economically and how fucked Bart is nowadays.
Newer Simpsons has actually been really good. Poorhouse Rock was a shockingly good episode about how lucky Homer was economically and how fucked Bart is nowadays.
I was wondering the same thing
With so many games that came out this summer, I’m excited to play this but it’ll have to wait until Christmas time.
Loved Divinity Original Sin 2 though.
Weird how recognizable it is.
Best analogue I’ve heard is to think of it like email. Google can run Gmail, Microsoft can run Hotmail, and countless others can run their own email setups and everyone talks to each other just fine.
The fediverse is the same. Lemmy is made from a bunch of randos running their own Lemmy servers, but we all interact like it’s one big Reddit-clone.
My plan is to combine a big income with a healthy hatred for buying things. It’s working great so far, but I’ve hit the limit for what I can chuck into retirement funds so I’m not sure what I’ll do when the money number gets too big.
It’s good. If you can find enjoyment in a book that’s more about it’s fascinating premise than it is about it’s characters then it’s especially good.
Same, as I read it I’ve been thinking of it as Chinese Michael Crichton, but overall it’s been very good.
This is exactly me. I wish I could do something more meaningful when it hits 8pm, and the alcohol isn’t good for me in the long run, but doing something that has be completely disconnected from my responsibilities for 1-2 hours at night keeps me recharged the rest of the time.
“This tastes like grandma!” wins for me because it’s immediately followed by Chief Wiggum: “You’re right son, it DOES taste like grandma!”
What the hell?
This is the realistic take I’ve been at for the two weeks since I learned all this existed.
Mastodon users are shocked and dismayed at the news of Meta using ActivityPub for their Twitterclone. And while it is sad, it’s the inevitable outcome hurtling forward.
I love the black line of trees in the front