#windows network
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never-obsolete · 4 months ago
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network neighborhood
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world-of-yana · 5 months ago
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unpretty · 3 months ago
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okay i definitely need to mute notifications about that post before people defending my coworker or complaining about The Cloud tempt me into revealing Too Much Information. i mean i've already revealed too much information quite frankly but so it goes.
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oh-bother-stickers · 5 months ago
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tithsokphanny31 · 5 months ago
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Everything 1990s, 2000s, and 2010s Nostalgia
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vanillafizz · 3 months ago
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•••
“I will command a great and terrible army, and we will sail to a billion worlds. We will sail until every light has been extinguished. You are strong, child, but I am beyond strength. I am the end, and I have come for you, Finn.”
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I’m starting back on my Adventure Time title card series! Stay tuned for more <3 🦋🐝
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oldwindowsicons · 2 years ago
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Windows 98 Plus! - Fashion theme - Network Neighborhood
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from-stars-to-shadows · 3 months ago
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I was awake from 1am till god knows how long. Its been a very very stressful night for me. There was a severe thunderstorm. I'm exhausted but alas I cannot go to sleep.
Fairly certain my eyes are bloodshot from crying and I have a lingering pain in my chest/a very bad headache (no doubt from panicking—)
I just want comfort from any of my partners right now... last night was so stressful and bad...
I don't feel good so I'll probably take off for a bit. Take some Tylenol, make myself a very large coffee before I head out into the world.
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vanderspeiglemd · 1 year ago
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When it first aired, I thought the way they treated Harry and Asta's relationship in s2 was really cruel and shitty, but I didn't expect even worse. Destroying their bond, forcing a parental relationship along with the flanderized Harry and a mean af Asta, that all really sucked but it didn't ruin what they used to be.
Like never mentioning their bond or even using Sara and Alan in promotion despite being the leads that's weird and a choice, devaluing their bond into something else is a choice too, even Harry's sudden ooc 'I wish I could kill you' after his entire story being about saving her is ridiculous but retconning the crevasse into a sexual assault? For any reason is wtf but especially for laughs?
They fucking hate that relationship, they hate it so much and it's so visceral and for what? They can't even let them be friends, they can't even let them bond like normal people. If it's personal between the two they should just have the characters not interact at all at this point that would be preferable to whatever else they've come up with.
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lovelybrandt · 7 months ago
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The Cutiest Tom And Jerry Gokko 🐈‍⬛🐁🧀 Wallpaper Desktop Screen For PC And Mac Microsoft Windows Or YouTube Thumbnail Video.
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rhfector · 2 days ago
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Fix Ethernet Doesn’t Have a Valid IP Configuration in Windows 11/10 | Ea...
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gianluc30 · 1 year ago
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How Logos Of Popular Brands Would Have Looked If They Existed In The Middle Ages By Ilya Stallone
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vanillafizz · 1 year ago
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What time is it? 🦋🐝
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cultivating-wildflowers · 11 months ago
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2024 Reading - July
Finally, things are turning around! I managed to pick some good books to read this month; even the printed books weren't the trial they have been for me lately.
Total books: 10  |  New reads: 8   |   2024 TBR completed: 6 (1 DNF) / 26/36 total   |   2024 Reading Goal: 44/100
June | August
potential reading list from July 1st
#1 - All the Pretty Horses by Cormac McCarthy - 5/5 stars ('24 TBR, audio)
mild content warning for language and some sexual content
McCarthy's writing is some of the most gorgeous and atmospheric writing I've ever read. It's also incredibly depressing. I want to continue with the rest of the trilogy but I'm in such a mental funk after finishing All the Pretty Horses that I'm scared to keep going.
More like this: McCarthy's writing reminds me of Wendell Berry in some ways. They both have a soothing, melancholic style that is deeply immersed in the period and setting of their chosen stories. But where Berry tends more towards righteous anger, McCarthy tends toward bleak inevitability.
#2 - The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson - 5/5 stars ('24 TBR, audio)
Not at all what I was expecting from this long-time resident of my TBR. Thoroughly enjoyed. Absolutely would not recommend to most people, but I DID recommend it to Kenzie:
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#3 - Shadows in Flight by Orson Scott Card - 2/5 stars (audio)
Possibly the worst missed opportunity in this series yet. We could have had so much fun with this one. It could have destroyed me emotionally. ANYTHING could have happened. Instead we had the most dull, drawn-out little episode where Bean is basically a vegetable (heh) and his bratty children argue for 200-odd pages. The discoveries aren't incredible, the revelations fall flat, the emotions don't exist, the characters are artless caricatures, and near the end I was yelling in frustration because Card had to go and get snotty and superior in the name of writing a "realistically hyper-intelligent person". All of the little things I dislike about Card's writing? All here.
Side note: I got the actual, physical audiobook CDs for this one and when I went to pick up my holds, the librarian looked at me, looked at the CD case, and said, "You know these are CDs, right? Some people don't realize that." Hoopla didn't have this one on audio and I was already physically reading two books with two more fresh from the library, so I was kind of desperate. The downside is that I can't speed up an audiobook when it's physical CDs.
Second note: The part that had me yelling in frustration had to do with Card's prediction of why artificial wombs might be outlawed in most places in a futuristic world, and why his characters thing most places are unreasonable. His take: "Because they're unnatural. Or they deprive surrogate mothers of a livelihood. Lots of reasons, but it comes down to the real reason: artificial wombs suggest that women aren't necessary, and that really bothers a lot of women." Your Mormonism is showing, Orson.
#4 - Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens - 4/5 stars ('24 TBR)
the usual content warnings apply
This book, something I probably never would have picked up on my own, came to me as a recommendation. There was some content I didn't care for (easy to skim), but the writing grabbed me from the first page and the pacing, characters, and setting were incredible. I haven't finished a printed book this quickly in ages.
#5 - The Vanderbeekers of 141st Street by Karin Yan Glaser - 4/5 stars ('24 TBR, audio)
Simply adorable.
More like this: I've only seen the movie, but it immediately reminded me of "Ramona and Beezus". The description also says it's in the tradition of "The Penderwicks", which I haven't yet read.
#6 - A Morbid Taste for Bones by Ellis Peters - 4/5 stars (audio)
Tumblr rec time! Some of y'all have been chatting about this one, so I snatched it up.
It was a fun, cozy sort of read. I definitely enjoyed it for the most part, though I felt like the ending kind of dragged. Not particularly interested in pursuing this series.
More like this: I'm not a huge fan of Father Brown (personal taste), but this had the same tone that I recall from the Father Brown collection I've read.
#7 - Network Effect by Martha Wells - 5/5 stars (reread, audio)
As good as ever.
#8 - The Food Explorer: The True Adventures of the Globe-Trotting Botanist Who Transformed What America Eats by Daniel Stone - 5/5 stars
What a treat!!! I was recommending this to people before I even finished it. Quick, fun, engaging, and informative; one of the best nonfics I've read all year. Now I want a buddy adventure film about Fairchild and Lathrop.
More like this: "Salt: A World History" by Mark Kurlansky.
#9 - Agent Garbo: The Brilliant, Eccentric Secret Agent Who Tricked Hitler and Saved D-Day by Stephan Talty - 5/5 stars ('24 TBR, Top 5 Anticipated Read)
"There are three kinds of people," [Pujol] wrote later, "those who make things happen, those who watch things happen, and those who wonder what happened."
Ahhhhhhhhh this one was fantastic. Like many, I was first introduced to Agent Garbo via tumblr, and I was really hoping this book would do his story justice; it absolutely does. It is expertly compiled and written. An adventure from start to finish.
Side note: I read excerpts of this to my dad on our drive to church and already have him interested in it.
More like this: "Agent Zigzag" by Ben MacIntyre. <- also shared this one with my dad (he read it in two days) and he loved it and others from MacIntyre.
#10 - System Collapse by Martha Wells - 4/5 stars (reread, audio)
Still not quite sure exactly how I feel about this one, but I enjoyed it overall.
DNF
On Death and Dying by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross ('24 TBR) - Either I'm dense or this (at least in the first chapter) is another case of someone with a highly specialized field of study interpreting the larger world through that lens, combined with some historical nuances that I'm completely missing. Possibly it's a worldview conflict and I ought to have pressed on for my own edification, but every page was a fresh slog.
The subject matter itself is fascinating, as is the viewpoint of someone in the medical field in the 60's. (Hello, common practice of fully sedating women during childbirth. I hate you.) The delivery is dry and academic. (Side note: I didn't realize until browsing reviews that THIS BOOK is where THE five stages of grief comes from.)
The Last Shadow by Orson Scott Card - Gave up within the first chapter after rolling my eyes every other paragraph. Hot garbage, which the good folks in the Ender subreddit confirm. I don't care how the series officially ends. Children of the Mind was a good enough conclusion for me.
The Geography of Bliss: One Grump’s Search for the Happiest Places in the World by Eric Weiner - Not my style at all. The man took his self-ascribed title of "grump" way too far.
Updraft by Fran Wilde - Somehow I didn't really pay attention to the fact that this was YA fantasy until I started reading. That's on me. But between an incoherent opening action scene and over a dozen Special Words introduced in the first chapter alone, it quickly became obvious that this wasn't for me.
Currently Reading:
Disorderly Knights by Dorothy Dunnett - As expected, I'm still working through this one.
Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell - I just started this one.
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bright-and-burning · 3 months ago
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going to pull my HAIR OUT over my freaking health insurance
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oldwindowsicons · 2 years ago
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Windows 98 Plus! - Falling Leaves theme - Network Neighborhood
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