Cracking the code is:
if (complacency > annoyances) {
sleep();
} else {
riot();
}
Jack of random trades at random times that randomly catch my interest for a random amount of time.
Cracking the code is:
if (complacency > annoyances) {
sleep();
} else {
riot();
}
But that’s where complacency and escapism becomes a large tool against the numbers. Its much too hard to get up and revolt when their favorite show is going to be on at 8 or X streaming service got a new movie. Only a fraction get up to protest when the rest sit back back and mumble under their breaths to their screens.
We need a major fuckup to get them off their couches, you know, something like policing the internet, or crashing the market and causing disgusting inflation rates. Oh wait. Its a shame that we’ve waited until things got this bad.
Battles never end, they just get hushed up. Dystopian tactics; throw a blanket over it and pretend it doesn’t exist because society is perfect for the rich and the powerful.
So I herd you liek kipz of mud.
Now THAT’S trickle down economics.
Well. I mean. Both release dopamine for me anyway.
I was pretty happy with Zen until updates started to being in some bugs and lag. It takes up the most resources to start, the URL bar peeks out a majority of the time in compact mode, If you prefer new tabs and are in compact mode, the side tabs don’t hide and cover a large part of your bookmarks bar while on a new tab page and it feels messy.
I went back to Floorp for a bit, but inevitably ended up back on Qutebrowser. The only downside to Qute is half the greasemonkey scripts to bypass YouTube ads don’t work and the python-adblock plus Brave adblock don’t block first party ads.
You can get around the first problem by adding a shortcut to bring up weblinks that open in MPV, but I haven’t found a solution to the second problem yet.