The advice or the reasearch in this article seems obvious to me - but I find it doesn’t resonate with many people. Basically, “you want to make friends or meet people, go do the things you like to do with other people.”
I have a number of acquaintances who that fall into the lonely and like-to-complain about it category, but never put the work in to making friends. As someone who has had to make a new set of friends at a late age, it’s work. And can be exhausting at times. But the effort is well worth it.
I think something is wrong with the css on the page. Nothing is styled. I’m on mobile so can not inspect the network, but I imagine the styles are not being served or used properly.
Working fine for me in Chrome, Safari mobile. What device you are using, can you please tag me a screenshot on X https://x.com/@vikashrathee to show what it looks like to you and on which country?
Maybe it’s just the way I use Reddit, but I still find it very informative and engaging. I subscribe to communities I can’t find elsewhere and the small niche communities there are fantastic. For instance, in r/peloton which I follow heavily, a number of pros post there and engage with their fans.
I stay far away from the front page, even my own. I use an rss reader for all the subs and when I want to comment I login into old.reddit.
You can find it toward the bottom. And yes, the link is copied to the clipboard. Not sure if it was fixed after posting, but there was def a broken link.
Thanks for the bug report yuppiepuppie! Will roll out a fix for that one asap. By the way the app is available on Windows, MacOS and Linux, so all feedback across platforms is very welcome!
About the developer name, we tried to get Apple to use our "doing business as" name, but no dice. But thanks, it's very important to know what the first impressions are, to remove friction as much possible.
This is a great comment, as it hits far too close to my heart. Im currently trying to get my team to rethink how they are building the APIs for certain services in our product, and focus really on design and craftmanship. To the point where Im ready to start breaking it apart myself and coding up the solution on my off hours.
But then I look at my son, and say "screw it, they couldnt pay me enough to care out of hours and give up play time"
The pictures of this technique triggers my submechanophobia - especially the photo of the two people working underneath the ship.
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