In my experience the pain after the aura sometimes happens, sometimes not. But it’s usually not severe anyway, just an annoying constant headache that lasts for a while (hours) after that.
In my experience the pain after the aura sometimes happens, sometimes not. But it’s usually not severe anyway, just an annoying constant headache that lasts for a while (hours) after that.
Curious, because in Portuguese it’s “extrOvertido.” But I just learned the Spanish spelling can be both “extravertido” and “extrovertido.”
Still it’s a positive net balance for the planet if it happens this way. But I think the “plastic safety” (in a food sense) would also end?
It also impresses me that there’s bacteria eating metal under the sea.
So this was just luck? I thought it was like… a new method was discovered to detect them more accurately or something.
Sad to know, and it’s partly the reason I don’t work on a open source iOS app currently: I’d rather work on something that solves a problem people are willing to pay.
I worked on apps that are used by the general public before (not mine, a company’s app) and the amount of users who are willing to shit on something without trying to understand that their issue isn’t common and we’d need more information to fix it are very high.
I think it’s better to have an app that makes a small niche happy than having a general popular app that will attract many toxic people.
The issue is definitely the time it takes to collapse, not the fact there’s an animation (in fact not having any animation was preventing me from use Memmy). For comparison, wefwef has a collapsing animation and it’s great and fast, like less than 1s.
True but for iOS developers this can be seen also as an investment, as any employer will hire you after seeing you maintain an app like Memmy. It’s the best kind of portfolio you can have.
I think the common shared experience of all of us is none of us can tell with absolute sure what triggers it, but we all naturally look for patterns.