RT's critic score of 29% vs. the audience score of 72% probably says a lot about this film.
Hopefully, it's a "One for them, one for me" situation for Ben Wheatley, and his next film will be more like his usual fare.
RT's critic score of 29% vs. the audience score of 72% probably says a lot about this film.
Hopefully, it's a "One for them, one for me" situation for Ben Wheatley, and his next film will be more like his usual fare.
I think the idea is that the image comes from the URL. If you have both an image and a URL, then you effectively have two URLs, and the post can only lead to one place.
If you wanted both, I guess you'd have to put one in the post, and one in the body (as an inline image, or a clickable link to what you're posting about)
I’m thinking of Alexandrite as the chocolate shell over my lemmy.world ice cream cone. Alexandrite is not an instance, correct?
Correct
I have not found a place on Alexandrite where my subscriptions (joined communities) are listed. Is this not yet available?
Top-left hamburger icon
I assume that if I join a community in one (either Alexandrite or Lemmy.world) it will sync with the other. True?
They'd be exactly the same - you can view lemmy.world via https://a.lemmy.world which maybe makes the relationship between the two more apparent.
I’ve joined communities in Alexandrite, but they don’t show in the list of subscribed communities in lemmy.world. That just may take more time. Yes?
There shouldn't be 'sync' issues, they should have the same content. It's complicated by how boned lemmy.world is though (it barely ever loads for me, and its API responses are currently out of whack)
Hope this helps. I really like using Alexandrite too!
I last saw Hamm in Maggie Moore(s) - he and Tina Fey seem to be doing John Slattery a favour by starring in it. Nick Mohammed also appears (inexplicitly in the American police, although so was Chris O'Dowd in Bridesmaids to be fair). I only have two types of movie reviews: "I watched to the end" or "I didn't" and Maggie Moore(s) is a Type 2 Review.
Edit: Hey, you can't downvote my comment on my own post. That's not fair (I was planning on using those upvotes for something). Am I not contributing to the discussion? I made the flippin' discussion! Where's all your posts, huh?
Stalin gets a bad rap, but none of us would be here if Mecha-Stalin hadn't fought off Mecha-Godzilla just when we needed him to. I feel like, sometimes, people forget that.
I feel like there's a connecting sentence missing from the middle of your post. The mundane reason is that the book would sell less well if if wasn't about Ripley, so we've mostly got ourselves to blame.
I think I might be the only person who watched 'Slip', a Roku Original (no, really).
It's one of those shows where one person just casually writes, stars and directs 7 episodes of telly like it's no big deal. Anyway, it's worth a watch, next time you're perusing Roku's extensive Originals slate.
Here's me, about to make a comment about the fun made-up word "autonomously", only to find out it's an actual word.
This episode really hit for me - I found myself giggling at all the silly things. I love how little time Nadia has for The Guide. The ending scenario is a comedy staple - I've being trying to figure what it reminded of, and I think it was seeing Moss behind the bar in The IT Crowd. Matt Berry maybe seems a bit distant lately, but really good ep nevertheless.
I am not getting this behavior on lemm.ee or lemmy.ml
To quote OP. I also tried it on feddit.nl (which is running 0.18.3), which returns an empty array, as you'd expect. On lemmy-world, the result you get for page 250000 is the same result you get for page 1 (the Fediverse community)
There's this idea, that if the companies just knew enough about you, they could send you the perfect ads. Ads you'd appreciate. Ads for things you didn't even realise you needed until you saw the Ad. This ignores that there are entire industries, and entire product ranges between industries, that - for one reason or another - never advertise.
All the information in the world about how I might want a new microwave is no good when you realise that you never see and ad for a microwave. Likewise, the 'perfect ad' for me most of the time would be something for specialised tools (for plumbing or bike repair or whatever) - again, something you never see an Ad for. So the ads I get are just weird, and I spend longer trying to figure why I getting it than I ever would do entertaining the idea that I'd click on it. In fact, the only adverts I've ever clicked on have been by accident, so every one is just a waste of time and space.
I realize this. How well it works for User 2 isn't super-relevant for User 1's experience. And if you're from a small instance, you'll always be User 1. To me, it seems like the answer to if the page will successfully load for User 1 is 'maybe', and I guess I was questioning whether this is good enough.