I'll uhhhhhh take a large uhhhhhhhhhh frappe with uhhhhhh extra creme
Kagi's verbatim search does this. You will actually get no results if nothing matches. It doesn't change your search and give you something you didn't ask for.
Quoting in a normal "All results" search works, too.
Did you just assume my ¥der?
What the heck did you just say about storage, you little newbie? I'll have you know I graduated top of my class in Computer Engineering, and I've been involved in numerous secret raids on terrible cable management, and I have over 300 confirmed SSD installs. You're complaining about space on your PC like it's some sort of divine mystery? Listen up, sailor.
You're whining about dropping $120 on BG3 and Starfield? You could get a 1TB SSD for as low as 35 bucks, you scallywag. Don't even get me started on HDDs; a 1TB one is practically a steal at 22 dollars. And let's go big or go home: 2TB HDD for 40-65 dollars, or if you're feeling ritzy, a 2TB SSD at 60-90. Still less than your precious games, maggot.
You're out of SATA ports? Son, have you heard of a PCIe SATA card? Load that baby up. You've got more slots on your motherboard than you have excuses. Talking about running out of space with a setup that should give you 2-4TB at least? Don't make me laugh. You're telling me you can't find space for your precious BG3? That's only 150GB, sailor, uninstall it if you're so keen on playing Starfield.
And if you've hit the limits of both onboard SATA and PCIe, then I have one word for you: USB 3. Worst case, you get an external drive and run Starfield from there. Don't act like your OS drive is the final frontier; there are many ways to expand your digital seas, you landlubber.
So before you cry about storage again, maybe do some basic math and stop acting like you're navigating uncharted waters. Get another drive, or walk the plank.
I like black because it accentuates the goofy faces cats make sometimes. I also just like the way they look in general.
Practically, it's easy to see when there's something in their fur and when it needs brushing.
As a bonus, they're easy to adopt. Every shelter seems to have a bunch.
Sync for Reddit's Lifetime Ultra was $30. I paid that without thinking. $100 is a big increase.
Plus, I got one year out of the Ultra lifetime for Reddit. This is an even bigger gamble.
If you're a developer, read the source code. People will tell you how they remember things working, or how they think they should work. The code is what it is.
I've been using it for about a year and a half, on the unlimited plan. I pay for the year up front for the discount. There's no way I'm willingly going to stop using Kagi. I'm a developer and perform about 2500 searches a month.
The ability to adjust the ranking of domains and the lenses save me a ton of time. No other engine comes close to the productivity.
You can easily talk to the developers and founder, too. I've had many of my suggestions actually implemented. It's great when you pay for the service and they are in it for you, not your data.
Make a GDPR data request to reddit. You'll get all your comments and posts and a ton of other stuff in CSV format.
Then the hand-wavy part: use the Lemmy API and write a utility to post things.
But definitely get your data.
Tildes is a non-starter because I'm not cool enough to know anyone to provide an invite.
This is my favorite Star Trek episode, too. Ruined.
I had this set up the day it was available in my area. Never got an alert. I find it difficult to believe I wasn't "exposed" during the pandemic, so I assume this didn't really provide much value.