@Deiru also technically downloading images from internet is copyright violation since you're copying it without author's permission.
As far as I know, making backups for personal use IS legal, at least in states. Tampering with data can be a copyright violation since copyright also gives author right to control how creation is modified (or not), but copyrights are weird and unless someone like N-word starts pursuing enforcement of those rules - nobody really cares if you cracked your game for offline play.
Pirating abandonware is also against the law technically but it's a victimless crime basically.
@Eidolon0 Don’t need to. I’m not losing weight and what I eat is somewhat planned. I’ve been doing this for a year and will know how well I’ve done once I have my blood test results.
@Eidolon0 Not at all. Less fat intake is the main reason why it’s harder to take in calories. Fat is 9kcal/g. Protein and carbs are easy, I can reach over 80g of the former and over 240g of the latter without trying.
So at least you can have this picture of a rather fancy electric bus charging station in Ostrava. Oddly enough, the pantograph isn't part of the bus. I haven't seen that solution before. DSC03076.jpg DSC03077.jpg image.png
@moonman I've had a timeline update failure in the past 15 minutes.
Not sure if Pleroma and Mastodon are misaligned with regards to post visibility as I sent a followers-only post to Technowix and he responded with a DM asking me why I sent a DM (when I didn't).
@guizzy Experience from someone else at work: a client was being profane (as usual, apparently) but when threatened with being dropped for their use of foul language they apologised after they were hung up on.
It's not the rep's fault something went tits-up. No use hurling abuse at them. @Mitsumitsu
@Eidolon0 I eat at least 1900kcal and target 2400kcal on gym days. As a vegan it's harder to reach calorie goals but nuts do help. I would like to eat more whole foods to keep better track of my intake so I can increase it without oils having an effect.
The 2500kcal (m) and 2000kcal (m) are government-endorsed recommendations. That's not to say people actually eat that much. I would also like to point out that we overestimate the effect exercise has on us, it mostly rests on diet. Gym trainers can tell you that.