If they could let player order Preston Garvey do all the minuteman job and leave the us alone.
I can be your Guest1234
anytime you want ;)
Did they get your number to send spam?
It's not that simple, cuneiform and hyeroglyphs had been accompanied by sophisticated systems representing phonemes and grammar elements of the languages it was being written with. People make the same mistakes regarding chinese characters (older scripts or more "primitive" scripts equated to simple drawings and nothing else). 🤷
Thankfully not even Gmail could become a walled garden since it's expected for a decent company to have its own domain (and email address).
Perhaps Naver should improve their own website first?
So the question is: why was it designed this way? Why can't we bypass the battery to power up the device from the charging cable alone?
Good luck everyone, it's going to be tough moderating something like that.
It's true, the front page, as it stands, is awful. I have to filter out so many trump/elon crap and (for nsfw accounts) so many sexual fetishes I didn't even know it existed. "Active" and "Hot" are infested with (sorry guys) low effort memes, and I have to click for "top 6 hours" or "top 12 hours" for something that starts looking interesting. Yes, I know the big R and other social media have the same problem, but that's not the point.
Now, this is where the content "sorting algorithm" becomes a thing to "boost engagement"... but sure we can do better?
Personally, I would like to see more active posts from small communities or instances over most populous ones. Self-posts, even better. What if there was a user preference for frontpage sorting?
Yes, but then there's this decades-long tradition of Lemmy/Reddit/Digg/Slashdot/etc users not reading the actual article and comment based only from headlines often crafted to maximize engagement.
Problem is that languages get in the way. Some are pretty similar like 15 ago
(Spanish) being 15 Aug
(English), but 1 ene
(Spanish) aren't that similar to 1 Jan
(English).
And for the usual "But English is used everwhere! I live in X!" crowd: NO, it isn't. Not everything you see as an "expat" is the same as the actual locals with their own language.
I've found that being consistent with what you choose to share is the most difficult thing. Conversations can get personal, and as you get closer to those random nicknames there's the constant urge to share mundane stuff about your daily lives like weather, holidays, and such that will all add up.