Moved from @Crul@lemmy.world
For those curious about 1-bit computers, see Usagi Electric’s playlist:
Source of the image: A Guide to Nintendo’s Game & Watch '80s Retro Handheld Games - LevelSkip
You’re welcome!
FYI: You can edit the post and include a link to the add-on so others can see it without reading the comments. EDIT: Thanks!
Image Max URL (Web - GitHub - Firefox addon) was able to get a 3840x2160 version.
My 2 cents: I have a similar relation with smartphones as yours.
In my case, what I fear the most is some app getting my contact list and using it to send some kind of “XXX has joined YYY service” notification to all of them. Also, I didn’t like that Google had all the data they wanted, so I ended with 2 smartphones:
AFAIK I’ve only had one incident because I trusted Telegram too much. There is always non-zero risk, but this works for me.
If you use the address bar frequently, you may be interested in JS bookmarklets with params:
Credit: David Lynch: The Angriest Dog in the World - Wikipedia
(yes, that David Lynch)
The Angriest Dog in the World is a comic strip created by film director David Lynch.
(…)
The strip was conceived by Lynch in 1973 during a period when he was experiencing feelings of great anger. First published in the LA Reader, the strip ran from 1983 until 1992. It was also serialised in the comics anthology Cheval Noir.
Thanks!
I tried Pixelfed (very briefly) not so long ago. I didn’t find a propper way to search for content. How do you discover new content?
Here you have a video with some interior shots: ▶ Concept car Citroën Eole 1985 by passion-citroen
Kill Sticky to “Kill off the annoying floating things blocking the website you’re trying to see.”
Notes:
FYI: I keep using it, it kind-of-works for me if I open the tab in the background and let it load (< 1min) before focusing on it. It also works if I’m not logged in (e.g.: in incognito mode).
That’s awesome!
Nice to see more people posting :)
FYI: You can add both pictures and text on the same post (so the source is visible without reading the comments).
According to this reddit comment, the source is His Eminence @WTMMP - tiwtter (archived).
According to this reddit comment, it’s from JohnOfE / Bischop.
I didn’t mean to imply otherwise, it was just a silly joke :)
Starting from the 3rd post, most of them are full stories. But I haven’t read everything, so I’m not sure how much of it is really scifi, although he’s most known for his cyberpunk stories in the 80s and 90s.
Here you have one I posted previously: “Homo sapiens declared extinct” by Bruce Sterling (1999)
From his wikipedia page:
Michael Bruce Sterling (born April 14, 1954) is an American science fiction author known for his novels and short fiction and editorship of the Mirrorshades anthology. In particular, he is linked to the cyberpunk subgenre.
Sterling’s first science-fiction story, Man-Made Self, was sold in 1976. He is the author of science-fiction novels, including Schismatrix (1985), Islands in the Net (1988), and Heavy Weather (1994). In 1992, he published his first non-fiction book, The Hacker Crackdown: Law and Disorder on the Electronic Frontier.[1]
It’s from Midnight Wanderers
!unix_surrealism@lemmy.sdf.org ?