What? Lol. I’ve used Sync for almost 10 years now and have seen it evolve. How is it a fork of another app?
What? Lol. I’ve used Sync for almost 10 years now and have seen it evolve. How is it a fork of another app?
Seek women of your own age instead of high school girls ;)
Even then, this is so unnecessarily uncomfortable.
fOr eVeRy aNiMaL YoU DoN’T EaT, i’lL EaT TwO
You can see the text “Den Haag Centraal” in the back, I recognise that font and styling as what the Dutch railways company uses.
Yeah so much was clear, but the building that has the text “Den Haag Centraal” is the actual station. This picture is taken from the building opposite, which appears to contain several different things, so it’s not, like I thought, a ministry building.
Nice as an art piece, but horrible as a background.
I think it’s one of the ministries in the Netherlands.
Perhaps it’s because I’m in Europe, but I’ve still never come across this issue. All AirBnb’s I’ve stayed in had very reasonable hosts.
I do this too. I hate using just x
, because it’s so non-descriptive.
j
is for a loop in a loop.
Competition is when things cannot be like your product
In Dutch we curse and insult with diseases. For example “kankerzooi” = “cancerous mess” and “tyfuslijer” = “typhoid sufferer”. That first one is a bit frowned upon, but using “kanker” is becoming more common. There’s an established word “kankeren” which means “to grumble”, though.
Anyway, what I’m trying to say is that this meme works very well for Dutch
Some more examples:
Funny one also is “kut” which means “vagina” and is used in the same way as cursing with “shit”. Also, something like “kanker” (cancer) can be used in a positive way to emphasize something, like “kankerlekker” meaning “extremely good tasting” (although still frowned upon by most people)
Actually, just read the Wikipedia page: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_profanity
Haskell has entered the chat
If anything, the Lemmy apps would look like Sync, because obviously Sync has existed way longer, even before Lemmy was even a thing. The more likely reason most of them look the same on Android, is because they’re following some (sometimes older) form of Material Design, the design standard for Android.