The concern here is them surreptitiously enabling the feature for all sorts of creepy stuff. Including, but certainly not limited to, ads, user tracking and the like.
The concern here is them surreptitiously enabling the feature for all sorts of creepy stuff. Including, but certainly not limited to, ads, user tracking and the like.
Dude.
You’re in the APPLE ENTHUSIAST lemmy community.
Take this shit elsewhere and let people enjoy the things they’re excited about.
Any luck with that?
Close. One of the first two.
The other was (and I think still is) in Tyson’s Corner, VA.
I understand how, in retrospect, it may feel like it isn’t groundbreaking, but do consider that before Die Hard, there really wasn’t anything quite like it.
A quote straight from Wikipedia:
It is considered to have revitalized the action genre, largely due to its depiction of McClane as a vulnerable and fallible protagonist, in contrast to the muscle-bound and invincible heroes of other films of the period.
While it did sort of fall apart and away from what made it great in the later sequels, I think it’s important to put the film into the context of when it was released and what it did to the genre.
All that to say, Die Hard fucking rules.
If it makes you feel any better my mom basically does the same thing unless she’s visiting.
Hang out with a bunch of cool dudes, do some diving, make some sushi.
Sounds pretty ideal.
GOOD NEWS, NOBODY!
Legend of Zelda: Totk and Dave the Diver.
I like single player exploration, apparently.
Word! I’ve been bouncing between wefwef & Memmy, and just started trying Mlem today.
And yeah! I realize in retrospect that’s what I loved about Reddit and had to pare things way back to smaller subreddits in order to keep it feeling that way.
I think this platform has a lot of potential.
I appreciate you saying that!
I’ve been bouncing between a few different iOS apps (all very similar to Apollo) and browsing the All feeds.
Plus an occasional search to try to find replacements for my favorite communities. Not 100% yet but I m digging the fresh start.
Also commenting way more again!
Seventeen years is wild!
Tell me about it! It was hard nuking 17 years worth of content–effectively my online identity–but it was the right thing to do.
FWIW, from a Reddit old timer, Lemmy feels a LOT closer to those early days than whatever is calling itself Reddit these days.
I personally resigned from a subreddit I founded and moderated for 11 years. Had nearly 300k subscribers but enough is enough.
Reddit isn’t like it was when I started using it 17 years ago and it’s not going back.
Fuck Spez.
They’re not but they do.
In fact, here is John Gruber’s skeptical take on Apple selling ads.
While they do claim to hold user privacy as high priority, there’s reason to be skeptical.