Ahh okay. Thanks.
ThePowerOfGeek
What happened around the middle of February that caused that slight but sharp drop-off?
Isn't driving around in one of those poorly-made death trap vehicles enough then?...
...Nah, probably not.
Fits in perfectly with the Tesla brand then, doesn't it.
Musk calls it a "massive cyber attack".
I call it "systemic infrastructure and personnel losses caused by the malignant narcissistic man-child who is running the company into the ground".
Given the context, no I don't think you are being aloof. They both knew what they were doing, and no amount of toadying up to you can make up for that.
Go back in time and do something to prevent Vasily Aleksandrovich Arkhipov from becoming the Executive Officer on the B-59 Soviet nuclear sub in October 1962. He's the guy who talked the Captain and the Political Officer out of launching the nukes when they thought they were being attacked by the US Navy during the Cuban Missile Crisis. His persuasiveness is generally considered to have avoided WWIII from starting then.
Good article. Thanks for sharing it OP.
Additionally, there's are some pretty nice free plugins for Java Minecraft server (e.g. Deluge) that allow Bedrock users to play on it too - from a PC, Xbox, PlayStation, phone, or whatever.
“This federal administration is making hard-working, tax-paying, God-fearing residents afraid to live their lives,” Wu said. “A city that’s scared is not a city that’s safe, a land ruled by fear is not the land of the free.”
Yeah, that's beautifully put.
Oh no, that's giving me Game of Thrones / ASOIAF / George RR Martin / King Bran vibes!
It's basically the evolution (or devolution?) of the Internet in a capitalist global economy. This is just the next step in the effort to profit off digital Data and communications.
Back in the early 2000s pretty much everything was free to use, and revenue came from passive ads. Then ad blindness and ad blockers kicked in, revenue went down, and the cat and mouse game began of companies trying to find ways of getting clicks and views while the consumer didn't want to do that. This has escalated over the last 20-odd years.
We're now at a point where paywalls are fairly effective (for now). So that's what's being pushed. Plus, subscriptions and everything-as-a-service is in vogue right now.
I expect that will end when the money-making enshitification of the Internet reaches a critical mass and the economy nosedives for various reasons.