Is it strange that I have absolutely NO idea what you’re talking about?
Is it strange that I have absolutely NO idea what you’re talking about?
Agree. Also the new Kobo Libra 2 has a dark mode option (white text on black background).
We would like to do that - lime we do with PCs - because we’re nerds. It would be a veeeery small market, just like people who build PCs
Have you tried using actual punctuation? Rofl
This response was more in depth than anything I was expecting. Thanks! As a newly minted father, the idea of sleeping bags with feet is kinda cool, should I start co-sleeping. Again thanks for your response
Since banking secrecy has been abolished, so basically 2009
ToSDR has this report about Feedly.
Inoreader scores slightly better but the android app has 2 trackers (Google Crashlytics and Google Firebase Analytics)
AP and Reuters are unbiased, but that’s because they are news agencies. They are not journalistic media, which means they often don’t provide context to what they talk about (which is only fine if you already know the topic) and you won’t find any in-depth stories, investigative journalism, explainers, etc
The Exodus Privacy analysis shows that the android app has no trackers, which is pretty amazing
RSS readers are the best. You can install any “dumb” RSS reader or use one that also suggests sources by topic, such as Inoreader (my personal choice) or Feedly
EDIT for clarity: Feedly and Inoreader are cloud-based, meaning that everything is synced between devices. Inoreader is based in Europe, Feedly in the US.
Looking at other articles, it looks like abusing the ellipses is something they do frequently
Now that I think about it, it’s actually my first time reading a TMZ piece. Looking at other articles, it does seem to be a thing they do pretty frequently. Weird!
I have a question for native english speakers. I’ve read the TMZ article and they keep using the ellipses aka the “dot dot dot” (…). Why is that? It’s usually used when skipping words inside quotations, but it does not seem to be the case here. They seem to be used instead of commas. Anyone can explain why?
Krea.ai is an online tool that lets you do that, but you can also do it yourself with Stable Diffusion
Love the idea, but you should really ask someone who actually speaks english to check the whole questionnaire. It’s filled with spelling and grammatical errors.
That’s Business Insider for you
If you’re still not very knowledgeable, “Sophie’s World” by Jostein Gaarder is an awesome read. Don’t let the fact that it’s a novel fool you, it’s perfect to understand who’s who across philosophy’s history.
What was its origin?
You’re right, the stats I saw were not about traffic
Axios is very good. Very dry journalism - almost crossing into news agency territory -, very fact-based, always mentioning the different positions on the matter at hand. They do talk about politics but you can just visit the other sections. They are especially big on tech stuff
EDIT: For how to get news, I use RSS. Inoreader in particular lets you subscribe to entire sites or just specific pages. It’s possibly the best piece of software I’ve ever tried