Also The_Picard_Maneuver@startrek.website
This is a very sane and wonderful place
Oof, you weren’t kidding.
Not a stupid question at all, lol. There are actually two different cities, both named Kansas City, on either side of the border:
It’s incredibly funny to me that the bigger one, and only one anyone talks about, isn’t the one in Kansas.
Anything that has set turns or levels with natural points to pause. The short time commitment make it easier to “one more turn” my way into playing for hours.
XCOM 2 is phenomenal for this.
It’s an old tradition that they don’t like discussing with outsiders.
Nope! Just tried mirroring it, and it looks normal.
They know what they did.
Close:
I’ve seen surveys like this before! Some are pretty funny.
Found one:
There is nothing worth thinking about under the black smudge
I recently dipped my toe into Linux with a raspberry pi and couldn’t figure out why Firefox was so laggy. I thought maybe I did something wrong.
It’s looks ridiculous now, but all the “north”, “south”, “midwest”, and “west” designations make sense if you think about how they named them all when the US was young and everybody lived on the east coast.
It’s also why the “south” stops before even reaching halfway across the southern half of the US.
Damn, that’s a lot of stars
It’s a total culture shock any time I check twitter. After browsing user-moderated spaces (like lemmy or reddit) for so long, I’ve gotten used to very rarely seeing anything more than a mildly conservative opinion. Seeing extreme right-wing stuff, outside of spammers trying to shock people, is almost non-existent.
Then you open twitter and get reminded what largely unmoderated internet looks like again.
There’s still good content mixed in with everything, but right wing outrage bait is absolutely winning the algorithm battle over there.
I just read the article and will definitely be watching the video when I can. What a wild story.
Excuse me, what kind of technology…?
The pirate voice in my head nearly ran out of breath singing the post title.
It’s a psychological consequence of polarization, which occurs when you have too many people in a social group agreeing with each other.
Groupthink elevates extreme opinions.