This reminds me of those games where you start off with water, wind, earth and fire and combine them to make new elements, which you then combine to make new elements, etc.
I wonder how the code works on emojikitchen.
This reminds me of those games where you start off with water, wind, earth and fire and combine them to make new elements, which you then combine to make new elements, etc.
I wonder how the code works on emojikitchen.
So many lines in this episode could have been used as the title.
I laughed that Stevie changed her accent but not to match Jason's.
In Alex's head becoming assertive and aggressive equals becoming an American.
We used to play something similar to the studio task as a drinking game. Stevie didn't even need that second blow.
Imagine stumbling upon a fully operational pink refrigerator, stocked with cold beverages, nestled incongruously in the heart of this arid wilderness. It's not a hallucination or a mirage—it's a deliberate and whimsical creation by the Namibia Tourism Board, designed to surprise and delight weary adventurers.
Those two sentences pretty much cover it.
Seem ok to me, both in grammar and what it's saying about the change. O(N²) to O(N) would be an exponential drop (2 down to 1, in fact).
Not using Lemmy, but there are other options like mbin that can do both thread/Reddit style and microblog/Twitter style. Personally, I find them so different that I'm happy to stick with different accounts on different sites.
Countries that spell it centre/centred:
Countries that spell it center/centered:
I was watching the gameplay of the old Amiga Spy Vs Spy the other day (didn't seem as good as I remembered)
First time playing, I like it!
Wed Jun 4, 2025 ✅Solved in 2:20✅
I was expecting that store.steampowered.com (or steampowered.com) would be on the HSTS preload list, but it's not for some reason.
Not for me, e.g. "remember, remember the fifth of November" is how we remember the date of Guy Fawkes Night in the UK. "Fourth of July", "14th of February", "First of April", etc.
I guess you mean in the States, but perhaps they say it that way because they write their dates M-D-Y.
And here I was expecting everyone else to say semi-circular too. Humble and simple.