distro reveal party
Notices by can we funko not (zerodemocracy@jorts.horse), page 2
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can we funko not (zerodemocracy@jorts.horse)'s status on Wednesday, 03-Jul-2019 17:29:30 EDT can we funko not
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can we funko not (zerodemocracy@jorts.horse)'s status on Saturday, 29-Jun-2019 20:55:12 EDT can we funko not
[KaZaAkReW]danny_devito_slowly_eating_gogurt.divx
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can we funko not (zerodemocracy@jorts.horse)'s status on Friday, 21-Jun-2019 15:36:51 EDT can we funko not
I saw someone mention using the SMPTE test pattern as a pride flag so here's an experiment:
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can we funko not (zerodemocracy@jorts.horse)'s status on Wednesday, 19-Jun-2019 14:57:27 EDT can we funko not
Mike Judge's body of work is frustrating because he actually tears it up when he's doing what he does best, but he still has a lot of garbage politics, much in a similar vein to South Park's "caring about anything is for losers" line. South Park is just bad, so you can blow the whole thing off and say so without having to wrestle with it.
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can we funko not (zerodemocracy@jorts.horse)'s status on Saturday, 15-Jun-2019 17:26:00 EDT can we funko not
A smarthome concept that wasn't absolute hell: the mid-80s Soviet SPHINX project, based on the idea that there would be a central, modular PC and appliances in the house like the TV would connect to it via the LAN. Everything was designed to be easily-expandable or pared-down as needed. It was purely conceptual but the props looked cool as hell.
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can we funko not (zerodemocracy@jorts.horse)'s status on Wednesday, 12-Jun-2019 14:26:20 EDT can we funko not
The internet was a loose collection of spaces - mostly BBSes, web forums, journal sites etc - that were run by individuals and teams who actively moderated them. For decades. It's safe to assume someone who looks at the idea of moderated instances and acts flabbergasted is being disingenuous if they were born before like 2008.