It's the reason I'm going to keep using the laser drone. I don't want to be stressing about how efficiently they're using their ammo, or that I don't have a backpack until the next resupply. Making the laser drone worse isn't going to make me want to use the ballistic drone more.
Until people outside the service industry have the same opportunity to get something extra, tipping culture can fuck right off.
I think that's called bonus pay, I've just never seen a job that actually gave bonus pay.
Typing fuck off can say a lot about you as a user. Right off the bat I can pretty comfortably guess you are either biased against Microsoft, bloatware, or cloud storage (not that this is necessarily a bad thing), or that you've recently had a negative experience with a Microsoft product.
I don't think willingly giving this information is worth the catharsis. Select other, give them nothing, be happy knowing that you've been as inconvenient as reasonably possible.
Here's my (NSFW) e621 tag (notice my username?) where I've commissioned several acts of graphic homosexual intercourse between a representation of myself and other male characters.
Yes, I very much am.
I pay just short of $200/mo, same situation, okay internet bundled with cable I never use, alternative is awful internet for not much less. No other options. And I live in a big city. Effective monopolies are hell.
I've never heard of this referred to as brigading, but it's definitely in the same spirit. Brigading usually means getting an external group of people to visit a post/comment solely to vote. It's effectively crowdsourcing vote manipulation.
I don't think voting down somebody's profile counts as vote manipulation because you still only have one voice, but it's still incredibly petty and I've heard Reddit even had a feature such that profile votes don't affect karma, despite not being banworthy to my knowledge. As a rule of thumb I don't check post history or even notice usernames because it doesn't really matter to me, unless a profile is genuinely entertaining to go through.
I'm talking out my ass here but I think outer space literally meant "outer area" as in the area outside of our planet, and we're so used to that term that it's turned into the proper noun Space. Earth (or whatever celestial body is your current frame of reference) is implied to be the inner space.
Star Trek also has a lot of good transporter accidents, including getting stuck mid-transport.
That's fair, as much as I love headshotting devastators, the railgun seems like it can deal with them a little more consistently, which is something at least.