This image go hard feel free to screenshot.
I’m a dwarf and I’m digging a hole Diggy diggy hole, diggy diggy hole
I’m a dwarf and I’m digging a hole Diggy diggy hole, diggy diggy hole
I’m a dwarf and I’m digging a hole Diggy diggy hole, diggy diggy hole
This image go hard feel free to screenshot.
In my country, 99% of the time you contact technical support, a poorly made bot responds (actually it is a while loop) with ambiguous and pre-written answers, and the only way to talk to a human is directly by going to the place in question, so nothing to worry about that here.
Dumb question, why don’t you use Garuda for everything?
Care to explain context?
Nice post but I almost get blind reading that.
Another positive point of the voices is that they are always with you, so you never feel alone.
Thank you, as soon as Warren opens Pokeyiff again I make you moderator!
Community check out (oh how ironic)
The only Google PlayStore frond-end that actually work as far as I know is Aurora Store.
Wouldn’t this also completely break ad blockers?
I’m scare I’m gonna die
Edit: I’m dead
Actually, pissing is a kind of deadly disease.
Yes, but their searches are very weird, try searching for the term ‘Ask’ or ‘Community’ for example, you get communities that don’t even have that word in the description or in their name.
Is it possible to translate into Spanish? I don’t see it among the available options
Hey, I FUCKING love Photon and as soon as I can I’m going to donate to the project, but I have three questions: Is there any kind of official community for the project? And, is there a way to search communities and only communities? I mean, I can search for posts and then search for communities where that post may be, but can I search for communities directly, and lastly, how can I join a community within Photon?
To be honest, I tried really hard to give it a try to Kcalc but I give up. Check out Kalk (no, no it’s the same), it’s a KDE Calculator and it’s preatty neat IMO.
Thank you for your contribution!
The joke is about the bin/ directory on Linux, which contains the binaries of the system (also called executables) which can break the system if you delete it, and also refer to the paper bin where all your trash files go and people tend to delete usually.