I'm as intrigued and horrified as everyone else. Also, this is a good time to remind everyone that you can edit post titles on Lemmy, so you can correct the typo. Unless, for all utensil purposes, you meant it to be there.
zipsglacier
Hahaha, that's great! And it explains why the cat looks like it knows what it's doing.
That's a good point. It's also less bitter than some other methods, which people may or may not prefer.
I often heat it up, just put it in the microwave. I also often cut it with water, depending on how strong I want it to be. I think it's good at any temp!
I'm astounded that this is the only mention of cold brew here. It's great! Listen people, if you haven't tried this before, here's what you do: Next time you're making your daily coffee, get a jar and make cold brew at the same time. Then you can try it later when it's ready.
- put what you think is a reasonable amount of grounds in a jar
- then put a bunch more, and a little more to be sure
- fill the rest of the jar with water and put a lid on
- shake it if you want
- let it sit 12--24 hours on the counter, or 24--48 hours on the fridge
- strain the grounds out however works for you. If you're a coffee drinker, you probably have some kind of strainer that will work, but if not, you can shake the mixture (again) so that the ground sink to the bottom, and then (optional) wait a bit for sediment and then pour carefully.
I now do cold brew almost all the time. It takes the same amount of time whether you make a large or small batch, so I make 4 days worth, and over the last 2 days I start another 48 hour batch.
Oh yeah, ease of switching between tiling and floating is another good point. And the "floating window exceptions" for the handful of applications I don't want to tile (like the steam library) are easy to set up and work really well now.
Edit: oh, I got it! I didn't understand you at first, but now I see what you meant: long press on the icon and choose "add to app list". Then I can add it to the folder. Thanks!!
I'm trying niagara now, and it seems like I can't put the Lemmy web app into a popup folder, because I can only choose items for a folder from the list of installed apps. That's a little annoying, but maybe I'll get used to it. And maybe there will be a good Lemmy app soon.
I wonder if some people are mad about this because they read it as "please come take care of my stuff, and pay me for it". I read it as "Do you want to rent in the area? I am willing to give you a steep discount if you also take care of my dog."
A license says what rules people have to follow to use something (a logo, in this case). So, it gives an owner control over how the thing is used. With a cc-by-sa license, the owners are basically saying "use it however you want, just credit the author and use a similarly unrestrictive license on what you make with it". Other things, especially company logos, have a much more restrictive licenses that are more like "don't ever use this, unless we explicitly tell you to (for an ad or something)."
Trademark registers something and says that other people can't make a similar thing and license it differently in their own. Like, if you made something kind of similar to the Mickey mouse logo, but changed the size or angle of the ears. A license can't stop you from using that to sell your products, because technically you're making your own new thing. But a trademark can stop you, because the new thing is too much like the old one. So trademarks have to be registered, to record who came up with it first, but licenses don't.
Edit to add: Oh, there are also "unregistered trademarks", basically common law trademark for something like a logo that already represents something. So I guess the Lemmy logo is an unregistered trademark by now.
My reading was that the base price is $40/night, and there's a further discount for dogsitting. This sounds like an amazing deal.
Maybe you know, but since 2016 whatsapp uses the same open-source encryption technology developed by the signal foundation. This means, on the one hand, that most user content is protected from facebook by encryption that it does not control, and on the other hand that the signal app (also made by the signal foundation) is a readily-available replacement for whatsapp when people are ready to switch.