

✅ I’m in this picture and i don’t like it.
✅ I’m in this picture and i don’t like it.
As someone who has cut down dead trees, what was his plan? “This way, it can fall in any direction and it’ll go fine” ?! So much extra work too, and with an axe! I’m not surprised at all it finally fell the way it did.
I don’t get it on an even more basic level; patient can’t pay and doc suddenly wants additional sessions… why?
We know, but the guy at Olive Garden will says bru-Shet-uh.
Which example are we referring to here? Sad that this needs to be narrowed-down.
Being that guy, first frame, “whence” means “from where.”
Near Riyadh Tower in the King Abdullah Financial District. (see also, reddit post 2mos ago)
Oui.
🤮, +1
What to do before powering on a vintage Mac [Piped link]
If other comments don’t get you sorted, Scrounger does it nicely. (if you trust some random site/ have no sensitive bookmarks; other options exist if not.)
Biblically accurate hot air balloon.
That’s part of the concern. We never even see the warnings, but they still know we’re blocking ads. Next they shrug and lock our accounts, because “but muh ad revenueee!”
Hmm. Are you asking in good faith, or to dogpile? Anyway, sure; I can explain why.
The Gruesome - clickbait because “if it bleeds it leads.”
Story - words like “story” are often plainly false when the article is a tiny blurb or fluff piece. Thankfully, this article is an actual story. But remember, it’s still bait.
of How - clickbait because it asks a question it doesn’t answer, baiting the headline-reader to click.
Neuralink’s Monkeys - oh, another Elon Musk altar. The press can’t get enough of Musk.
Actually Died - more bleeding leading.
Headlines can just be content, rather than a tease. This article title intentionally relays no new info.
Ah, so I was wrong. Gotcha.
Clickbait headline, no tldr? That’s a downvote for me dawg.
See also: the blog, with link to the video pictured, from Jeff Geerling. Tl;dr: it’s about de-censoring text.