reflex Now • 100%
They have good taste
Tastes like brass.
reflex Now • 100%
They are Russian, so it’s probably a mix of vodka and amphetamines.
Do svidanya. Vodka soda.
reflex Now • 96%
Yet another post that reads like four shakespeare characters who come out in the middle of the play to talk about something completely unrelated for comic relief
There's more like this?! Where, pray tell?!
reflex Now • 100%
They’re gonna be drones designed to withstand sustained 20G turns to be able to get their guns on target
Full Gallente.
reflex Now • 100%
Dead men are heavier than broken hearts.
From The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler.
reflex Now • 100%
it simply traumatises everyone that comes too near.
Absolute Trauma Field.
reflex Now • 100%
You'll get paid after we get back.
Must bring your own weapons.
Safety not guaranteed.
I have only done this once before.
reflex Now • 100%
I love roast beef, and meatloaf, and Philly cheese-steakes, and tuna noodle casserole. 🥰
What about blue...berry waffles? 😏
reflex Now • 100%
1.21gw == output of 1 nuke plant for 1 day == power single home for 100 years
avg lightning = 10gw
Whoa, this is heavy.
reflex Now • 100%
reflex Now • 100%
But its prime target was Nintendo, according to a 2020 email leaked during the FTC v Microsoft trial.
I'm in the process of deGoogling and also shoring up my email privacy, which means I'm hyper aware of mistakes I make, hence the stupid question: I was testing something with Proton Mail and misspelled the domain—swapped the "r" with one of the neighboring letters. I didn't get an email bounceback, which is fine, because you don't always get a bounceback anyway. But, should I be concerned that I might have just volunteered my email directly to some spam outfit? The "wrong" domain is registered. I'm acutely aware that the misspelling being one letter away from "Proton" might be intentional to capture misspellings like the one I made. Also, the wrong domain seems to be associated with oopatet.com and trellian.com, which are blocked by ublock. Is there anything I should do from a privacy perspective? Or is this a non-issue?
Comedian Rich Hall gave us the sniglet -- defined as (remember?) any word that doesn't appear in the dictionary, but should. Seeking to name the nameless things and behaviors we witness every day . . . .
reflex
reflex@ kbin.socialTen minutes later I was sorry.
But ten minutes later I was somewhere else.