Are you able to recommend any shows or movies that portray Egypt and your culture well?
We Americans don't get a lot of exposure to Egypt much outside of media like Indiana Jones or Moon Knight (which, despite having scenes set in Cairo, wasn't filmed in Egypt as far as I know).
You didn't make any substantive critiques about the journalism, so why would anyone be responding to that? All you've said is that you "don't care about ffmpeg", which is dismissive of the software itself, so yeah obviously people are going to be responding about the software.
Yes, this happens all the time to me. I think it's a relatively common thing for autists to emote differently, and I'm autistic, so I guess it makes sense for me.
People who know me well can definitely detect my smiles though, so that's nice. I've been trying to get used to overcompensating for strangers to make sure they see my expressions, and I just hope that it doesn't end up looking too uncanny valley.
It isn't like it's a niche secret that YouTube siphons people's privacy and sells their personal information. Creators being ignorant about that might have been a excuse a decade ago, but not now. I don't think we should be excusing content creators who collaborate with and benefit from the machinery of viewer-exploitative content distribution that is YouTube.
Edit: also, you're here in a privacy community defending the violation of privacy that you yourself originally described as dystopian. I'm not trying to be confrontational with you, here. I genuinely do not understand how you can think that content creators bear no responsibility for the dystopian situation you've encountered. Certainly they don't bear all the responsibility for what YouTube does, but they chose to support YouTube by uploading monetized content there.
I'm not saying they should be canceled for that, but appreciated for it? Let's not.
can't even show your appreciation without selling more information
The content producer you're trying to show appreciation for is the one who put their content on a platform that forces you to sell your information in order to appreciate them. Maybe let's not appreciate people who do that.
Your comments are not wrong, but also Trump is not the sole issue here. There would still be a problem even if he was removed from office today.
Proprietary software and services are an issue regardless of which government jurisdiction they fall under. It's a good idea for the EU to be moving to open source instead of proprietary solutions based in the EU.
Calibre will work for this, but it almost certainly won't give a good result. That's not Calibre's fault; Adobe InDesign produces exactly the same horrible output from a PDF. It's just a reality that PDF does not lend itself gracefully to being converted easily to a well behaved EPUB.
Unless you are converting something extremely simple with no inline images or interesting text layout, getting a nice EPUB will almost definitely be a tedious process of fiddling directly with the HTML and CSS with something like Sigil (or Calibre, but it's not as nice).
I last left this morning for work. The last I left for my own enjoyment was last weekend for the Pride parade. (State of GA in the USA celebrates in October for some reason.)
(I tried to spoiler this bottom part since you didn't ask for advice, but I guess I don't know how. Sorry.)
I suffer from chronic depression, so I might know something of what you're going through. Hang in there, friend. It gets better, eventually.
Also, I know this probably sounds ridiculous (it does to me when I remind myself of it while depressed, especially since I'm also autistic and antisocial) but the safety of home makes depression worse for me. It's the last thing that I want to do while depressed, but it really does help tremendously to get out and do something. Anything. Go to the grocery store and buy a ramen or whatever, it doesn't matter. Go through the human line to checkout so that you have to interact with a person in some capacity. It's silly, but it does help me a tiny bit.
The next day, try to do it again, it helps a tiny bit again. Eventually all the tiny little bits add up, maybe, but even if they don't then at least it's a tiny bit better all along.
The fact that other publications are more right leaning than The Guardian doesn't make it left leaning. It's a liberal paper, supporting liberal positions and routinely expressing opposition to leftists like Corbyn. In my book, support for liberalism and opposition to leftism makes it a right wing publication.
We USians often don't realize that the Guardian is a right wing publication. A frustrating number of people in US circles (especially liberals who don't know they aren't leftists) think anything European/UK is ideal and that conservatives don't have any influence there.
Because of investors needing a quick "win" with a game studio acquisition, and because gamers buy the slop that someone managed to shit out while trying to appease those investors.
The investors cash out and are emboldened to go burn some other game studio into the ground again. If the studio hasn't imploded badly enough yet, the investors demand another game with whatever IP "worked" last time, but at a lesser budget with more aggressive deadlines, so the next result that is shit out is worse, but players still buy it.
The cycle continues endlessly, it's the same pattern in every industry because it's all the same tiny group of investors with "diversified portfolios" ruining everything in the name of profit.
Intelligence is a difficult thing to measure, especially merely by interacting with a person for a little while.
Many of the answers in this thread amount to privileged assumptions that fail to account for the fact that what they describe as signs of lacking intelligence could also be symptoms of exhaustion and alienation inherent to conditions such as living under a capitalist system and/or neurodiversity and/or disability and/or sickness and/or...
For example, when someone works 16 hours a day for 5/6 days a week, they are far less likely to have the energy for using their little free time away from work to ponder deep questions at the same level as someone privileged enough to have a less demanding existence. This is not correlated with their intelligence in any way.
Are you able to recommend any shows or movies that portray Egypt and your culture well?
We Americans don't get a lot of exposure to Egypt much outside of media like Indiana Jones or Moon Knight (which, despite having scenes set in Cairo, wasn't filmed in Egypt as far as I know).