You’ll have a second kimchi awakening when you switch to home made :)
I’ve never seen store bought that can compare, barring actually being in Korea.
You’ll have a second kimchi awakening when you switch to home made :)
I’ve never seen store bought that can compare, barring actually being in Korea.
It’s a friendly transaction between users purely out of the desire to help, and leaving it available to those who have the same question.
Further, it’s a transaction that Reddit facilitated out of their own pocket. I think people are being extremely petty about it. It’s best to just mourn and move on, we can still appreciate the golden years that Reddit gave us.
I agree, it seems very petty to me. If you don’t like the direction just leave, what’s the point of trying to burn it down? Especially given how much we all got out of it throughout the golden years. I say just mourn and move on.
You pointed out all the extra complexities. Visiting multiple websites, and making a decision, and understanding what the decision means. Those are the complexities, nobody is saying they are big but even you recognize they exist.
Mainstream is also what killed Reddit, better to have a “big enough to be good” community. I almost appreciate that the barrier of entry is slightly higher.
Holy shit, that’s terrifying. Caught at really the last possible moment.
For what it’s worth, i just used the “add to Home Screen” feature on my phone’s web browser (from my instance homepage) and it’s working great. Indistinguishable from a normal “app” experience. In my case Safari on iOS but i doubt it matters.
Edit: looks like this:
100% of people who say shit like this in reference to Norway don’t know that Norway isn’t a member of the EU.