Sort of reminds me of the time my friend fixed me up with a friend of his partner.
OK its not the same but we met up at a nice chinese restaurant in amsterdam and I immediately found my date very hot. We had chemistry right away! When the server came to take the drink order my date lean in close and whisper to my ear "only get a mixer" as she pressed two small bottles into my hand and then winked at me.
Turned out she is a flight attendant for klm and her purse was full of them!
Not exactly but sort of. What I have done is buy a moderately priced desk chair and then upgrade the cylinder and the wheels to much nicer ones. Makes a world of different.
In my experience, big chain movie theaters in the US rarely show foreign language films. You got to an "art house" cinema to see those and then they are almost always in the original language with subtitles.
Most distros include a tool to convert or install packages from other formats. I'd look into that. I've never used Arch so unfortunately I can't be more specific.
Yes, they exist but they aren't commonly made anymore so you will have to look for used speakers. I'd also suggest to look at old boomboxes which often have an aux input while the older models don't have any bluetooth.
but according to guardian, "Bigotry" is really just a name for any opinion with which you happen to disagree.
Wow you totally misrepresented that link.
The linked article isn't even about the meaning of the word bigot, its a debate between two people about whether a politician should use the word bigot.
One of the debaters asserts that "Bigotry is really just a name for any opinion with which you happen to disagree." which is his personal opinion, not a statement by The Guardian.
The assertion is never supported, contradicts the dictionary, and isn't shared by the other debater in the article.
Pay a bunch of simps to make posts all over about how they tried switching to linux and/or GIMP but it was too hard and broke all the time, claiming that open source is "just a hobby."