Violet Beauregard finally got the blurple out of her skin, but missed it.
Violet Beauregard finally got the blurple out of her skin, but missed it.
Yes, always irl for me which I had stated previously.
I’m talking about humans in meat space saying the dot out loud. Because that’s what the comment I was responding to seemed to be about.
It kinda varies for me.
.ee gets referenced less for sure. The folks I know that have used lemmy longest will do the dot ee, or double-e. Noobs tend to fumble with it, as in “lemmy with two ees at the end” and eventually go with whatever they’ve heard spoken most.
But .ml always gets the . I believe that’s because there’s no shorthand for it verbally. Mull? Mill? Mall? Too many options for most folks to bother trying.
Irl, people actually do say .world, .ml, .whatever, when the stuff before he dot is lemmy or close equivalent, and the conversation is about instances.
As in, “yeah, I had an account on .ml, but they be trippin, so I moved over to .ee”
But instances like the one I’m on just get called by what it says, or like blahaj, just by a single part.
Yeah, exactly. This isn’t news.
Well, yeah, archive is the answer.
Look dude, nobody owes you, or anyone else, the work of going through and copy/pasting random comments they made ten years ago. Why would you even think that’s a reasonable expectation?
For one, reddit doesn’t even make it realistic because they limit how many comments you can actually go back through. The automated stuff has the same limit.
Seriously, why the fuck does anyone think that they’re entitled to not only the answer, but to the person doing the extra work it would take to move it? That’s some next level narcissism right there.
Me?
I’d go for the one that fit the “vibe” the best. If everyone can do the job itself equally, you step down to the people you think are going to mesh well with everyone else (and yourself). 10k a year is a small price to pay if picking the other one is less likely to result in a smooth workplace.
After that, if those were as equal as guesswork can be, I’d look at things like proximity that might make one or other more reliable on a day-to-day basis, and if it was the higher pay request, try and negotiate. Again, that’s guesswork.
But the point is that if you look at the qualifications for a job when considering pay, it can end up costing as much or more in hassles, or be a gain that exceeds the monetary price tag in other ways.
Then again, I likely wouldn’t be in charge of hiring unless it was my own business. As an employee stuck in a hiring position, the choice would be based on policy, and a company big enough to hire and pay people to do hiring isn’t going to think the way I think.
This isn’t an attempt to counter your position, it’s just an explanation of my priorities because it’s an interesting question.
Bollocks!
If they want to hire cheap, they’ll end up getting cheap work.
We live in a capitalist trap, and they suck for not paying a fair wage in it.
No, no, it isn’t the person that did anything wrong.
Be angry at reddit for fucking over their users and laying claim to what those users wrote as reddit’s property.
Fuck leaving up anything that supports a company like that
looks at Ed Currie
looks at McIlhenny
Okay.