off by default, turns off after every update, multiple updates per day, please read our 500 page terms of service after every update or you are legally responsible for any legal expenses we incur for reason ever.
Both was good. Both is an option. People seem to forget.
It’s difficult to separate ‘you like how things worked when you were fifteen’ from honest appreciation of how much Windows XP era design was just better. Not the giant-head video player, or the Fisher-Price color scheme, but like-- remember when things looked like things? Remember when each icon was allowed to be a different color? We let people shit up plain text with sculpted multicolor emoji spam, but the parts that do stuff better be all one shade of gray sharply delineated from another shade of gray.
off by default, turns off after every update, multiple updates per day, please read our 500 page terms of service after every update or you are legally responsible for any legal expenses we incur for reason ever.
Oh you missed the email? Well the deadline to opt out of binding arbitration has already passed.
Not labeled on/off, the toggle just changes between green and blue.
I installed Fedora Linux recently and have no idea if I enabled or disabled 3rd party repositories
It is no longer just scumbag design it has become standard design
It’s still scumbag design.
The scumbags are winning.
But if they have nothing to gain … yeah actually I think that’s worse somehow…
I miss the days when buttons had words on them instead of hieroglyphics.
Both was good. Both is an option. People seem to forget.
It’s difficult to separate ‘you like how things worked when you were fifteen’ from honest appreciation of how much Windows XP era design was just better. Not the giant-head video player, or the Fisher-Price color scheme, but like-- remember when things looked like things? Remember when each icon was allowed to be a different color? We let people shit up plain text with sculpted multicolor emoji spam, but the parts that do stuff better be all one shade of gray sharply delineated from another shade of gray.