

solid self-repairable or renowned long-lasting tools is my thinking. You can learn lots of basic plumbing and electrics in small doses


solid self-repairable or renowned long-lasting tools is my thinking. You can learn lots of basic plumbing and electrics in small doses


I mean, fair enough on you opinions, but it sounds as if all you’re saying is this one particular messaging tool doesn’t fit your requirements?
As I see it, (and I may be speculating and/or wrong), supporting bots might worsen some aspects of other users experience. If there necessitates a worsening of other users’ experience in order to support what you’d want to do, at what point should you just use a different app?
There’s little reasoning for catering to a niche use like huge channels and bots, and tbh that sounds like a dreadful experience to me. Dev time is costly, feature creep is a killer, I don’t see lack of support for unwanted (to me) features as a negative.


Are these negatives?


You’ll never get rid of mint, it’s tenacious. Cutting it back is probably helping it thrive tbh. Herbs are really easy to grow, and a plant is usually cheaper than a packet of fresh cut herb anyway.


Same here, I’ve branched out to grow lovage, hissop, sorrel, all these ancient herbs that have fallen out of fashion for non-commercialization. I think humans ate well back when it was mostly fire roasted veg and herbs!


Honestly the faster they try to lock us out of the web the sooner we can get a second, freer web with card games and prostitution.


Rules for thee, etc. But yes essentially no-one is paying the judges at your Thames Water hearing to dismiss the fine because they have a vested interest in you succeeding. You’re not a vehicle for consumption and subjugation of millions, and you won’t make anyone a billionaire.
Things like this disparity made the gravity-assisted equalizing machine popular in France.
That’s not how you steer motorcycles normally.


I worked on it, it’s not Roger Rabbit, but it’s a decent film. Lots of human element and a feel good interesting take on Acme vs Coyote.


I wish the general populace was educated enough to willfully ignore it, rather than legislate. This stuff should obviously die.
Is there not a future in which the AI bubble bursts, and we are in a glut of datacentre memory and storage with no buyers?
There should be a cataclysmic bottoming out of the market that leads to a period of cheap, abundant parts.