For anyone familiar with the car camping vs ultralight camping crowds: this sounds all too familiar…
For anyone familiar with the car camping vs ultralight camping crowds: this sounds all too familiar…
Unfortunately 24 hour libraries, or even late night, are pretty much non-existent now because 1) parents use them as babysitters and 2) nothing against homeless people but librarians aren’t equipped or staffed to take care of them appropriately.
And now with the book bans librarians are in short supply too, which means shorter hours and even fully closing on some weekdays.
Support your local library, everyone! See if there’s a “friends of” group. It’s a great way to connect with your community.
Just providing context. Not “blaming it on the town.”
I’m unfortunately very familiar with this town. It’s an industrial wasteland with no real job market and drugs are rampant.
This story is unfortunately not at all surprising.
The judge who signed off on the search warrant also has 2 DUIs
honey bees should be raised in land they are native to.
I just wish we could stop with the misinformation surrounding them. I wish we would protect native bees instead of worshipping invasives (in the US).
God bless Firefox reader mode.
Good VPNs have adblockers.
Everyone on the Internet should have one now. Also a password generator.
Thanks for your response! If you light events with broadcast cameras, I am the annoying video engineer behind the camera controls asking about flicker and color balance. I hope they keep making y’all’s specialty bulbs. Looks like there’s a big list of exceptions!
I wonder if this will have any effect on the film industry…
steps in shit
“Hey it smells like you stepped in shit.”
“What makes you assume it’s shit?”
Sorry to be grandpa reddit but the last one felt forced too
Several cities, including Paris and Grenoble in France, São Paulo in Brazil, and Chennai in India have taken concrete steps in this direction. In São Paulo, ads are banned from certain parts of the city, and in Paris, they are prohibited near schools.
Several more cities are following suit, with a growing ad-free movement aiming to make cities a better place to live. ‘Adfree Cities,’ a UK-based nonprofit, is one such example. Cities such as Bristol, Birmingham, and Cardiff are part of its network, attempting to drastically reduce the amount of urban advertising
This is an excellent trend, and one that only lobbyists would fight against.
Since the online advert bubble seems to be bursting, I’m going to take that as a glimmer of hope. And until then, VPN maximus, ads be gone!
I think it’s important to note this will up your backyard tick count exponentially
It stays on my phone for the sole reason that I have notifications turned on from a local weather account
I think you’re both right. We need more building designed to be flex spaces. It’s impossible to guess what we need 20 years from now. Let’s make sure new construction can handle a wide range of use.
Can you elaborate on this?
I can’t WFH so I haven’t really kept up with the trend
The comments are suggesting everyone do charge backs.
I’m halfway through Psalm for the Wild Built, and uh, this link is relevant.
Isn’t this one of the big reasons why the Florida apartment complex collapsed?
I started thinking about this yesterday too, after watching the Ask This Old House guys remove moss from a roof, explaining that it will retain water and shorten the life of the shingles. As some houses are prone to moss, you’d think we’d just figure out how to make a bio-roof. That seems like your step one to a veg-roof.