plazman30 1y ago • 66%
I think Ron Paul was pretty inspirational to me at one point. Recently, I wonder whether he's just another Russian shill.
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
That happens all the time with publicly traded companies. This is the reason why we had the dotcom bubble burst in the last 1990s.
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
I do! I did not know it could do that.
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
This looks quite interesting
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
Which physical books are you waiting for?
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
I wish there was browser extension that let me use vim keyboard binding inside of text boxes like this one.
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
Usually necessary is on and greyed out in almost all the dialog boxes I see.
Can someone recommend a plugin to click through all those annoying GDPR cookie popups. In a perfecrt world, I woudl like it to automagically™ pick necessary only, but I'm sure that's asking for too much.
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
You've had them long enough.
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4477033-reddit-unprofitable-despite-growth
Nevertheless, like many IPOs, Reddit remains unprofitable. The question for investors is whether Reddit can achieve minimum viable economies of scale and achieve profitability. So far, there are no indications that this will happen.
There are few other sources that say reddit is unprofitale.
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
Mongoose Traveller
I really want to try out Shadowdark
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
I think you replied to the wrong message.
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
I don't know. My guess would be no. Which is a shame.
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
CompUSA was a shitty place to work.
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
This change sucks. But, from what I read, Reddit have NEVER been profitable. If they were smart, they would modified the API so it included ads. I don't think Reddit is long for this world. Even if these protests were effective, reddit is eventually going away. They're too big to make a profit now.
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
It does!
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
Thank you. That worked!
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
Under free I would add Emacs (https://emacsformacos.com/) and vimr (https://github.com/qvacua/vimr)
Also don't forget the venerable BBEdit, which is almost as old as the Mac is (https://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit/)
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
The New Model M that came out a few years ago is pretty rock solid. I've had that, and a Mini-M and love them both.
Unicomp recently switched controllers to the Raspberry Pi RP2040. You can now flash them with QMK/VIAL and get a fully programmable Model M!
I just went through a long list of keyboard shortcuts for Firefox. One that I didn't see that I would find useful is to press something like ⇧ Shift + ⌘ + C to copy the URL and then paste it into an email or message to send to someone. Does something like this exist?
plazman30 1y ago • 100%
I use Firefox, because of Firefox containers and total cookie protection.
But with Safari adding profiles to the next version, I will need to revisit Safari again.
plazman30 1y ago • 83%
Both are bad choices. When reddit says open /r/pics or else, you just delete /r/pics.
Reddit has NEVER been profitable. It's the classic:
- Takes a bunch of venture capital funding
- Builds a huge user base
- Get bought
- Parent company tries to figure out a way to make money off of you.
- When they can't, they try to spin you off and IPO you.
- You have your "oh shit" moment and realize you actually have to be profitable now.
This is the crap that caused the dot-com bubble in the late 90s.
Their current business model is unsustainable.
They're doing the API war out of sheer survival.
The sad part is, we all went along for the ride, using the service and filling it with useful information, never wondering if it was still going to be there a decade or two later.
Reddit wants to IPO. Having gone through the IPO process twice now with a company, I can tell you, the only thing that matters is money in the bank. The more money you have in the bank, the more you can charge for your IPO. When I worked at CompUSA back in the 90s, we didn't pay any of our creditors for something like 6 months before the IPO to swell the bank accounts. I remember the week before the IPO, we had almost nothing in the store, because we owed everyone money. 30 days after IPO, trucks came rolling in again with product.