When you walking down the steps and the LiveLeak logo appears
Analista Programador & Diseñador Gráfico de Temuco, Chile. Leo cómics y a veces escribo sobre ellos.
✸ Parte del sitio web de cómics Cuarto Mundo
✸ Dueño de Imaquinaria Tienda
When you walking down the steps and the LiveLeak logo appears
Fellas, is it gay to drive a car? I mean, you’re basically riding four tiny dicks every time you jump into a car.
You mean your favorite thing in ocean /s
Rutracker has been really useful to find japanese music, particularly jazz fusion and citypop. Usually lots of .flac and .ogg.
Hope you find what you’re looking for!
I’m currently jumping between Memmy, Bean, Lemmios and Avelon. Dropped Thunder, Liftoff, Olympus and Lemmotif. There’s actually a lot of options going around, not to mention the several other WPAs being developed too.
I hear you, I also find it weird to put ads for a free experience when the original service is also free and ad-free.
I prefer apps that, for example, offer limited usage for free and full features under payment. I know what others are saying about this not being a side project. For example, Ivory for Mastodon (iOS) is a freemium app with a subscription model for you to be able to full use the app, also not a “side project” but their model works (they previously developed Tweetbot until all the mess at Xitter started to happen last year).
I will support any indie developer if the product is worth it and the price is right. I’m currently paying Ivory for Mastodon (iOS) and the experience is top notch. The fact that paid apps for the fediverse are popping up is actually a great sign of interest and critical mass of active users.
On a side note, what are you guys using on iOS? There’s a LOT of options currently, but the four that I’ve been enjoying the most are Memmy, Bean, Lemmios and Avelon. I’m sure in a couple of months we’ll see amazing progress and clearer differentiation from each other.
Ubuntu, maybe around 2007-2008.
I was starting college and got my first notebook. Up to that point we had only a desktop PC for all the family and this was the first time I could actually try things out without messing with my brothers’ stuff, so I eagerly jumped to try new things and format my notebook every 2 months after completely screwing something up.
The thing that hooked me up was the breath of fresh air in terms of customisation that a Linux distro offered compared to Windows. Funnily enough the mac OS style was my favourite so I eventually ended up buying a mac, but I always maintained a distro on bootcamp.