I would assume that they have more than six briefs in total.
bob_lemon
I think the easiest way to get started is StreetComplete: https://streetcomplete.app/
It will show you places in your vicinity where information is missing, like opening hours of shops, or the existence of ramps at stairs, and you can provide them in a really simple interface. You can filter out questions you don't like to answer as well.
I want an animated show of the Stormlight Archives. Something in the style of the Netflix Castlevania series or similar. I don't think a live action show could do it justice without an insane budget.
World be worth getting for the multiplayer alone. That was always good fun, unless you were among the people that could not connect to anyone because ~~you forgot to sacrifice your unborn child to the sun god~~ of some strange networking reason.
That's not what I'm saying. You can absolutely continue to condemn and fight the democratic party on any topic you deem worthwhile.
But putting that tiny mark on the ballot paper might ever so slightly get the world moving closer to the ideal you imagine, instead of veering away from it.
That is the rationale I'm using here.
Not even trying to minimize the amount of killing in the human world because it won't reach 0 seems like you don't actually care about human life at all.
The launch price is what killed it. In a genre dominated by AA games, games need to use AA pricetags.
Minus 50 DKP for Trump
Not sure of that is real marble, but here's a random PSA anyway:
Don't put marble anywhere close to anywhere you might spill anything remotely resembling acid. You can literally etch that stuff with OJ.
Cars being online has some tangible benefits in that they can transmit location data to emergency services, especially if the driver is unresponsive. Might save someone from dying in a ditch in the middle of nowhere.
Arguably, some of the data collected while driving is also very useful for maintenance and development (e.g. if a lot of vehicles start having a similar issue after X miles).
That said, this data should be limited in scope and use (e.g. must not be sold, especially not to insurance companies), as well as anonymized as much as possible. Which is currently not the case, and that definitely needs regulation.
The trick with nicknames is using them in alphabetical order.
There no reason Twitter would need to actually delete data from their backend.