Ah. I haven’t switched to Wayland yet so I wasn’t aware of that issue.
Moobythegoldensock
There’s also the unofficial flatpak, which works rather well.
I should be more clear: “Huge mistake” means it’s an opinion piece from a person who has a clear bias, not factual journalism. And the fact that the title gives no indication of what it’s actually about means the only thing I have to go on is the author disagrees with something, but won’t say what until I pay them for an opinion I didn’t ask for.
I would personally rather be given the information and form my own opinion.
Exactly. People have levied the same complaints about musicals, yet we don’t see videos floating around of musicals without music. Both are genres that aren’t trying to be entirely realistic.
I’m personally kind of over laugh track shows simply because they feel performative. I’d rather watch a comedy that has a plot than watch comedy built like stand-up: with a setup, punchline, and then pause for audience response. It’s why so many of them have catchphrases like “Did I do that?” “Bazinga!” and “We were on a break!” It’s fine if others enjoy different setups for the same joke, but I’d personally rather be more immersed in the show than constantly be reminded I’m supposed to laugh.
Which aircraft? What are the flight numbers?
There’s no answer because the title is misleading.
Clickbait title that is clearly partisan, looks like not worth reading regardless of content.
I hope we get a GI Robot cameo.
Finally got around to watching Stargate SG-1, so Tobin Bell. Not sure if it’s in the true spirit of the OP as it was before Saw made him famous, but he absolutely stood out from the rest.
I hope she sues them. It’s the only way these shitty companies will learn.
The episode is With Interest, the bank heist episode.
“I said, ‘I don’t believe in a bank heist in 2025,’” Cox recalled. “I really pushed back on the episode, and yet I hear from so many people that they love that episode. So, it just goes to show you just don’t know. It’s so subjective. Everyone’s taste is different.”
I’m running mine in Alpine.
Horror has always been a source of social commentary, though. Going all the way back to at least Frankenstein, published in 1818.