Absolutely. American spend more time communing than ever before. That's a lot of time spent steering that could be spent swiping.
This is hypersensitive, passive aggressive, and paints women as fragile and in need of rescuing from every perceived slight. Stop apologizing.
Reminds me of I saw a documentary that followed students through med school. One of them was a former mechanic (not to mention a child prodigy and a biker- interesting guy) but he disliked the approach of med school…
I love the rss feed: no signing in, no opening tab upon tab upon tab, no silly magazine layout. Just the feed menu on the top of the page, the individual feeds displayed on the bottom- it's perfect.
It's always had great speed, performance, security and has a long history of innovation. When you consider how many features they've created that have become defaults across browsers, everyone is using Opera to one…
Nice! I walk a couple times a day, but I take shortcuts and routes through parks and woods that are off the map, so to speak. Now I can finally figure out just how far I'm walking. Good job!
This is precisely why I got a Sony Reader instead.
Absolutely. American spend more time communing than ever before. That's a lot of time spent steering that could be spent swiping.
This is hypersensitive, passive aggressive, and paints women as fragile and in need of rescuing from every perceived slight. Stop apologizing.
Reminds me of I saw a documentary that followed students through med school. One of them was a former mechanic (not to mention a child prodigy and a biker- interesting guy) but he disliked the approach of med school…
I love the rss feed: no signing in, no opening tab upon tab upon tab, no silly magazine layout. Just the feed menu on the top of the page, the individual feeds displayed on the bottom- it's perfect.
It's always had great speed, performance, security and has a long history of innovation. When you consider how many features they've created that have become defaults across browsers, everyone is using Opera to one…
Nice! I walk a couple times a day, but I take shortcuts and routes through parks and woods that are off the map, so to speak. Now I can finally figure out just how far I'm walking. Good job!
This is precisely why I got a Sony Reader instead.