Je propose https://timeguessr.com/ à mettre dans la catégorie histoire/géo, c'est le même principe mais avec des vraies photos c'est quand même plus chouette :) et il y a un challenge quotidien (38 787/50 000 ici)
eltoukan
https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/it-just-works and for your listening pleasure: https://m.soundcloud.com/the-chalkeaters/it-just-works
damn yes, I checked cartes a month or two ago and it was very buggy for me, seems like it's being worked on! the UI even looks goood
Same as what the others said: in France, non-French EU citizens can vote for EU parliament and municipal elections (electing a mayor). However, you need French citizenship in order to vote for your parliamentary representative (which could be misunderstood as "local" as it is on a district level), and for presidential elections.
I'm actually curious to know why local elections specifically, if it's an EU directive or just "common" ?
According to Yuka (a food and cosmetics rating system), most brands listed in the OP image do not have a good rating. There are two moderate risk ingredients : Sodium Laurel Sulfate (listed as an irritant and an allergen, present in Botot, some Colgate products,, OralB, some sensodyne products and some paradontax products) and Titanium dioxide (listed as potential carcinogen, present in some paradontax and some oral-B, I think it's for teeth whitening). Having a "Moderate risk" ingredient means your score cannot be better than "Poor".
The app also lists other potential allergens that are "Low risk" and present in most most products across brands (there are sometimes differences within the same brand). If a product only has low risk ingredients, its rating is usually "Good" or "Excellent".
I couldn't find exactly the pictured product, but this danish brand has an "Excellent" rating on all of its products, not a full score because it includes some of the Low Risk allergens. The best rated products are actually from Elmex.
Of course this is just one arbitrary rating system, but it's quite transparent and you can get all the details for risk for each ingredient, backed by scientific literature. Also the app is free if you want to scan barcodes :)
I don't think Wero is comparable to the others, they didn't have the scope, ambition and backing Wero and the European Payments Initiative have ? It's limited right now but it just launched, I'm sure more banks will progressively join.
c'est du role play de président ? je n'y comprends rien
had a similar experience, but don't forget that interrail makes you forget about the real price of tickets which iirc are quite the issue
I'm just Lisan aaaal'Gahiiib
« C'est vrai que nous avons fait confiance au vendeur » « nous n’y connaissons rien en mécanique. » « Nous avons déboursé 56 000 € »
Ca fait très mal, mais je ne peut que rire méchant aussi. Quelle idée de s'engager sur de tels montants sans une vérification par quelqu'un qui s'y connaît, et surtout avant de faire de telles distances...
~~Mais plus sérieusement, est-ce qu'il n'y a pas un moyen de se faire rembourser ? Il n'y a pas d'obligation de contrôle technique comme en France ?~~ bien sûr c'est écrit dans l'article 😅 bon courage a eux quand même pour la procédure judiciaire
Si le site dédié c'est Europresse, alors il existe l'extension Ophirofox sur Firefox/Chrome qui simplifie beaucoup le processus (un bouton apparaît directement sur le site de presse et on a presque l'article en un clic). Et la bonne nouvelle, c'est que ça marche du tonnerre avec Firefox mobile (cf le nouveau bouton "Lire sur Europresse"):
Tout est sur https://ophirofox.ophir.dev/, notamment l'installation sur mobile.
for those on the other side of the channel, the exhibition is already up in Paris until the 27th of July: https://www.cinematheque.fr/exposition.html (in french)