Can we, without relentlessly criticizing, let people have their un-funny, non-memes and screenshots and whatever little harmless things in which they've managed to find a tiny shriveled flower of joy?
Dwarvy
Maybe it differs per country or state. I've done it dozens of times, never failed me.
I live in the Netherlands, maybe theres a law that mandates it, but I'm not 100% sure.
Protip for apps/services that require monthly payments: pay and immediately cancel. You've already payed for a month, so the service will keep working until the next billing day, but it won't renew because you've already canceled.
You can unblock from the app:
- browse to the community in question by using the search function
- tap the menu on the top right
- click the block button again (it will say it blocked the community)
- refresh the page
Community will be unblocked.
I don't think there's a list of blocked communities, so you have to know which community it was.
Yeah depression sucks :(
You could write down the passphrase on a piece of paper and hide it in a book or something. Most hacks happen via malware, database leaks, or social engineering anyway. Just don't lend out the book to anyone accidentally lmao.
No system is perfect, unfortunately.
I hope you have a lovely day :)
Protip: create a passphrase instead of a password. Way harder to guess, way easier to remember.
I have yet to find a way to do this on my phone, but on my pc I use the Joplin note taking app with the web clipper extension. Joplin is also available for smartphones, but I don't think the webclipper is.
You can select part of a webpage, or even the whole page, and have it saved into Joplin. You can create notebooks for certain categories or add tags to make searching stuff more easy.
I sync it using nextcloud, but that's a bit more work to set up.
Lmao
Can you explain the context of the template? I have no idea what the context is.
I eat the peel without the banana, obviously.
Translation according to Google translate:
"I found in the garden what looks like an old Christmas decoration from the early 1800s."