Maybe offer to shout them a nice dinner once a month. I know it involves money but it’s more of a gift than paying their bills.
Maybe offer to shout them a nice dinner once a month. I know it involves money but it’s more of a gift than paying their bills.
I liked using KanBoard. Its simple and runs well inside a docker container.
Rio Tinto is moving to solar (and some wind) here in Australia for its aluminum refining and smelting operations. Would be good if the same could be done for steel too.
Here’s the ABC news reporting
Police say no indication of terrorism at this stage.
I use honey to sweeten my coffee. Sometimes I’ll add some Butterscotch Schnapps if its a cold winter.
This Slowcooker Lentil Soup tastes great and freezes well.
WoW, XBL and Eve are some examples
Subscriptions to online vs offline games is the major difference from now and back then.
I used to pay a subscription to play WoW and Eve because alot of the game runs on the game company’s hardware, which requires maintenance and upgrading periodically.
Single player games that have no reason to connect to the internet other than for updates should not be locked into having a continuous connection to authentication servers and there is no reason to pay a continuing subscription for the game, other than the company’s greed.
They should release decent DLC, expansions, etc if they want to keep milking the same title (or better yet, invest in some new IP instead of swapping franchises like trading cards)
Not exactly niche but I’d like to see some active gardening and diy communities. The existing ones aren’t very active.
I’m leaving everything to a wildlife conservancy. Heres some info:
Australian Wildlife Conservancy
Heres some sites that rank charities reputations (maybe google “charity reputation ratings” for more localized info):
Needs one of those dementia villages so he can pretend hes still relevant
Seconded. Bobiverse is great to listen to while mowing the lawn or doing other mindless jobs.