Carrying water to the sea is the Dutch version.
Carrying water to the sea is the Dutch version.
I’ll second this. Only podcast I actually subscribe to the ad-less version, to support it.
It’s a thing.
We park the bike near the station. Each station has extensive room for bikes. Larger cities often have underground bike parking.
You might want to travel, visit the Netherlands or Denmark. Bicycles and public transport allow you to have a wider circle, and connect them!
Ah, you’re right. It does work with dynamic addresses.
It works like this for me, currently:
I do have a bunch of IP reservations. I don’t really know how you’d do port forwarding without subs static IP address to forward to. I have not seen any of the data sharing options, but it could be that I gave those permissions years ago and forgot…
It’s still there for me in “Advanced networking”->“Port Management”.
It’s a term coined by Cory Doctorow, Sci-Fi writer and ex-EFF, who has been writing about (tech) monopolies, and in particular monopsonies, and how those types of two sided markets originally grow by given users something they need, often for an artificial low price or even free, until they dominate that side of the market, after which they focus mostly on the other side of the market, in this case advertisers, and step by step, slowly dismantling the reason users originally liked their product… Enshittification.
Doctorow has lots to say, so here’s a link.
I was also using b&bw, but it’s been impossible to find locally (the Netherlands).
Thing is, none of the other shower gels I’ve tried foam up in the same way. Which means using a lot more than I would of the b&bw gel.
Anyone know if something that works comparably and is widely available in Europe?
We’re more in a suburb type environment, but yeah, I don’t see that happening in a busy city environment…
Actually, our cats often join us when walking our dogs. We have two dogs, and when we walk them leashed, at night, one to three of our (six) cats come along and walk around us. They dart out in advance up to ten meters, using available cover (cars) to hide, and often laag behind in those places to ensure it is clear that they are not being walked but are simply following the same route of their own accord.
Not sure how this happened, so I can’t help you with training advice. But maybe it’s just our regular schedule of walking that does it?
It would crash every fifteen minutes…