It wouldn’t allow me to upload the gif.
It wouldn’t allow me to upload the gif.
If the bus is supposed to arrive every 15 minutes, is the bus 5 minutes early or 10 minutes late?
(TIL Lemmy doesn’t support gifs in comments.)
https://64.media.tumblr.com/3e6ade574f99d1b226364a2ad3bd224d/tumblr_n7c0lwKf6a1tajjsfo1_400.gif
Obligatory: https://youtu.be/CXFsWAkLoXQ
Example: one of my shirts cannot go in the dryer. It has to hang dry.
This is about what I imagine would happen.
90% of the time whenever you get one of those menus, you can just press 0 to get a real person on the line.
Yes, but 99% (give or take) of Android users won’t know or care how to install 3rd party apps. So most people would only care about the Google Play Store limitation.
That’s for manually installing apps, I believe. But developers on Google Play have to follow this.
I think you meant to reply to this comment.
Technically, Android does that, too, but the limit on that is a few years. If I’m not mistaken, the lowest version of Android that Google will allow a user to install through the Play Store is Android 12 (released in September 2020).
I’m a Windows user, but my church uses a Mac to run its projection and video recording. I’ll admit it works pretty well for what we typically need it to do, but it recently took me like five minutes to figure out how to crop a picture because you apparently can’t do that by simply opening the file and clicking the crop icon.
Mac’s filesystem is an absolute mess, too. This might just be my own inexperience, but I’ve saved things like PowerPoints and videos in order to upload them, and then I’ll go to the website to upload them, and I won’t be able to find them because they’re not in a specific folder or something.
This is true. It’s an operating system that runs on a computer.
Computers can be good or bad depending on the hardware they use.
Fast forward to today, I ended up killing him and am writing this from jail.
That went from 0 to 100 real fast.
turns phone upside-down
… huh.
I’m kind of curious to see if plugging my phone (which charges via USB-C) into my laptop’s charger (which plugs into one of my laptop’s USB-C ports would blow it up.
I obviously won’t do it, but I’m still curious.
I’m glad that there’s sort of an agreed-upon standard for phone chargers now, but you’re right that it’s also a bit of a problem.
Technically, you do still need just the seven numbers if you’re calling locally. The phone system will just assume you’re calling the local area code if you don’t dial one. In my area, it’s pretty easy because the only people who don’t have the local area code (there’s only one even though it’s far from a rural area) are people who moved here and never changed their number.
They probably have that at a state fair here in the US. They deep fry everything there, even Oreos.