Yup, this is my boomer mother exactly. Even told my nieces and nephew many times if you do something wrong just say it was an accident and nobody can be mad at you.
SmashingSquid
At the beginning he said changes would be decided by polls. I can't think of any others because he says something stupid so often it's hard to keep track of.
Click the aA on the left of the address bar and click turn off content blockers. If that fixes it you have a safari extension causing it.
I'd say compromise and post about the crap when he actually does something rather than just saying he's going to. Him saying he's going to remove blocking is an eye roll but him actually doing so and causing more damage to twitter gives me popcorn cravings.
Check how much business internet would cost, there's usually no data caps.
https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted#task-management--to-do-lists
There's a bunch listed on awesome self hosted if you haven't looked there.
I would trust pornhub with my ID more than I'd trust that asshat with it.
Try reelgood.com
Any chance you can name the ISP? And what speed is your plan rated at?
Try scanning a ton of documents with your phone instead of a document feeder. It'll take forever and you'll probably have to redo a few pages.
They weren't using docker and the Plex software was multiple years out of data:
https://thehackernews.com/2023/03/lastpass-hack-engineers-failure-to.html
The shortcoming, which was discovered and reported to Plex by Tenable in March 2020, was addressed by Plex in version 1.19.3.2764 released on May 7, 2020. The current version of Plex Media Server is 1.31.1.6733.
"Unfortunately, the LastPass employee never upgraded their software to activate the patch," Plex said in a statement. "For reference, the version that addressed this exploit was roughly 75 versions ago."
The tensing was probably causing you to give off threatening body language. Next time just speak up and tell them it's wearing off and you're in pain. Any good dentist won't want you to be in pain.
I have no idea if it's common for them to be attacked but dental anxiety is common and a panic attack sets off the fight or flight instinct so it wouldn't be surprising.