One of us needs a review on relativistic physics (but it's probably me). Shouldn't the cursor experience less time than you?
I had to twist our IT guy's arm to update after reading about this yesterday. Apparently he was waiting for a "convenient" time to do it for nearly 3 weeks. It took less than 3 minutes to update....
Disco Elysium has sleazy publisher issues though, doesn't it?
I'm absolutely guilty of self-documenting code, but mostly because I'm sick of everyone else's lying comments.
Far away from the stench of the heavens
I can't speak to long term, but I just registered my first domain through them yesterday and it seemed fine. Better than other small services I've used in the past, for sure.
Once people come around to it being reddit but the accounts look and feel more like email, it's going to take off (or continue to). It's not such a great feat that it'll be insurmountable for average internet users.
Ultimately, if the content is here, people will follow.
Neil Gaiman announced the Neverwhere sequel back in '17, and the last news I've been able to find is it's delayed as of 2020. Is there any news I've missed since then? I'm pretty stoked about going back to that world for more.
I deleted my mostly unused account shortly after Musk started showing his crazy. Anything that makes it harder to use it accidentally is fine by me.
I knew I read something was kept for 6 months ;)
Glad to see that even here, the best way to get the right answer on the internet is to provide a wrong one.
IIRC, I've read comments elsewhere that pictrs caches for 6 months, but I can't independently verify. I hope this gets a broader answer because I'm still on the fence about getting an instance set up for myself and some small communities.