How do you know the EEOC applies where she is?
I'd never heard of mandatory minimum parking until now. That sounds horrendous.
America big!
Only one thing can be the worst. Grammatically everything else is just bad.
In Europe it was relatively smooth though, in my experience. I worked in a shop when it was rolled out. I'm guessing you're American?
It is pretty bad though.
What is sns?
I read the article and I still don't really understand what this is.
every single water system
It's small parts of two of them.
Why will it? Surely it should make no difference?
It's the raising of the animals before they're slaughtered that's the problem, not the cooking after they're dead.
Wait, you pay to receive texts?
What is USC? If you mean US sizes, why would they be used in the UK?
That's the bit I was missing.
Who's "we" in this comment?
It's generally considered poor form to visit a UK community and say that the US is more important.
UK elections are always on Thursdays for some unfathomable reason.
In Scotland perhaps. There's no council tax in Northern Ireland either, instead they use the rates system. I'm not aware that there are any discounts for septic tank users.
Also note that in Scotland and Northern Ireland there are no water charges, the utilities are publicly owned.
![the background blur](https://lemm.ee/pictrs/image/16c9e75e-6518-4eb7-bbde-39c9e7edeca6.jpeg?thumbnail=256&format=webp)
![](https://lemm.ee/pictrs/image/16c9e75e-6518-4eb7-bbde-39c9e7edeca6.jpeg?thumbnail=1024&format=webp)
It also failed to install OneDrive. Perhaps because it's a bus.
I've used Roundcube for years and finally got fed up with it breaking on every update because of the plugin system. Are there better options around?
Watching the network tab of Chrome when I have a Lemmy instance open I can watch the websocket data coming in from the server. Even though I have "Subscribed" communities selected, the data stream seems to contain all post data (at first glance it looks like new posts and vote changes) from all communities federated to the instance.
It's manageable for the moment but if the network grows a lot, that could end up being a huge amount of data that's sent to users and probably not desirable if users are on slow metered connections. Is this by design?