Traipse
wild homes loves you but chooses darkness!
Traipse

That’s... a really selfish and shitty thing to do. And I’d say that I hope people don’t treat you as callously as you seem to treat others, but really it doesn’t bother me if they do, because you seem to be comfortable with the world being, as you put it, a rough place.

It’s really not that hard. If you watch the video, you should support the person’s work. Then, if you don’t like it, you should just... not watch any more of that person’s videos? It’s like going to a movie. You bought a ticket, you watched the film, and you didn’t like it. You’d probably just not go see more movies

I do wish they’d be a little more transparent about how the Red revenue will be distributed among creators. A lot of the stuff I watch isn’t coming from the mega-popular people, and I’d like to make sure the people I <i>do</i> like are getting a fair cut (I’m on Red because I already subscribe to Play Music, so opting

You’re going to give money to Youtube anyway, whether it’s the ad system or Red. Those creators, for better or for worse, have a business agreement with Youtube once they submit videos to the site. Whether it’s a fair system is a good question, but that’s one for the individual creators to assess.

Adblock doesn’t really serve that purpose explicitly. It seems like you’re trying to shoehorn Adblock into a purpose it does not serve, actually. You’re suggesting using Adblock in this way: consume whatever you want (as much as you wish) and only provide revenue support to those things you like, while still being

If you’re really, really struggling with that part of the Chaperone quest... I’d recommend waiting until Mayhem Clash returns to the playlist. It’s already confirmed that Golden Gun kills count AS Last Word kills, so it’s 2% per golden gun kill instead of 1% with other equipped weapons, and you can reliably fire off

It’s a rough raid the first time. Some of the fights (warpriest, sisters) are sound, with reasonably sensible mechanics. One (Golgoroth) has sound-ish mechanics but requires a ton of coordination. The last (Oryx) has entirely too many obscurantist mechanics, done sequentially, and requires a lot of teamwork too.

No, he’s right. Can’t fuck ghosts. Reason?

Technically the X has to be OK Google Now, even if it's on Kit Kat and even if you've got GEL installed— it's just some quirk of the X that OK Google, OK Jarvis, and OK Computer won't work. Touchless Control always supercedes GEL... it'll work on almost everything else running GEL, though.

Android has definitely been aimed at the male market for a long time... although under Matias' direction and with the Holo/Card UI progression, that seems to be changing rapidly.

I've found (as I've gotten older) that money isn't as scary as it seems when you're starting out. Yes, it's crucial to have enough savings to cover emergency changes in your life, and to maintain an automated plan for covering things like insurance and stuff... but the investing and saving for retirement? I find it

To be fair, her article added enormously more to the discussion than does your comment.

I'm with you. I'm not at all opposed to people driving where it's necessary... luckily I live in a warm climate, and my commute is only a couple of miles each way (although it was once longer). I just feel bad for those who wouldn't think twice about getting in the car when it's completely unneeded. Cheers!

Bike.

Disagree. There are legitimate reasons to encourage someone toward other securities— for instance, the comparative simplicity of no-load ETFs and the like— but "it's too difficult" is laughable. There is this thing called The Internet that provides you all the information the professionals have access to, and there is

Agree. I uploaded my library to Play (or at least the stuff that Play didn't already have on tap) and subscribed to All Access when it was locked in at $7.99/month. The mobile interface is pretty great— it's like a tutorial in Android App Design Guidelines— and the desktop interface suits me fine. No complaints here.

I get the reasons why you'd find the plan appealing— after all, data usage given current technology is unlikely to go down any time soon— and I do understand that for some people, Verizon's network is the only one large enough to provide them reliable service.

I don't think I'd pay the unsubsidised price for Verizon phones just to keep unlimited data, particularly when they can still change the terms of your agreement to kill your plan and you'll be left with a phone that can't be used on any other network. They've left a poor loophole open for the time being (and one

I buy the Nexus each time. So, yearly.

Ah, I see the point you're making now, my bad.