+1 for heliboard, been using it for a while and its a great replacement for Openboard.
Finalsolo963
Whoosh
I assume "are" got autocorrected.
They had me in the first half not gonna lie
Its disgustingly tragic and sad that there ain't taijin on any of them fruit cups.
I'm internet poisoned as hell but I'm surprised that that's not common knowledge. Its also often 1488 with the 14 referring to the 14 words of the following neo-nazi slogans:
"We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children"
"because the beauty of the White Aryan woman must not perish from the Earth."
88 = Heil Hitler
Juice->Jews
Disregard productivity, acquire comfy rice.
A single state is still a large market to pass up, and tooling costs make it impractical to manufacture different versions of things.
Even for software, the US experiences positive externalities of the GDPR and the rest of the US does from privacy laws in California and Illinois (likely others that I don't know off the top of my head)
State laws also often serve as the prototype for federal ones.
It should be federal, but this is absolutely good news.
The reward for the work is the result of the work. For these communities to exists, there must be moderation and for many people the existence of said communities is worth the cost in time/server costs. Reddit selling stock off the backs of people who perform free labor for them is a problem, but someone who sets up a lemmy/mastodon/whatever to host discussion about the things that they care about is not a slave just because they don't demand monetary compensation or sell your data. The lack of monetization isn't a bug it's a feature.
What's the over-under on this being a honeypot?