Cats offer us mice because we are incompetent at hunting ourselves.
I have too many toothbrushes
Cats offer us mice because we are incompetent at hunting ourselves.


A companion read to this article, where the blogger went to the same conference, “google I/O”, and then went on the one dedicated to advertisers (same place, just de day after), “Marketing Live”. Hang on to something solid, it’s bad. Like, really.
Yeah, let’s go classic : Casablanca, Singing in the rain, Vertigo
Hey Skunk, how’s stuff flying? I was working in Grottes last March/April and gosh what’s wrong with people… That’s what they call a bad neighbourhood??? Lol (with a subtle hint of racism 🤢).
Come have a drink on me at “the office” this summer!
Disclaimer: I’m familiar with the French-speaking part, not the German one.
Work: you can’t live there long-term without a working contract, which comes with a residency permit if the employer goes the extra mile of justifying why they are hiring foreigners and certifying they can’t find a Swiss candidate. Many foreigners work in Switzerland, but some employers won’t bother with the extra paperwork (may not apply to every type of job but applies to me)
Admin: Switzerland is a highly organised, highly functional country. When you are in, it’s freaking good (I don’t know Germany). The level of services, from public infrastructure to social support is excellent most everywhere.
It’s safe. May be “boring” but frak it, not having to worry about crime most everywhere is just cool.
It can be funny when you are in what Swiss people consider a “ghetto” or a “high crime area”, you’ll be like wtf, it’s just some kids smoking weed is all. Our daughters going out at night in Geneva didn’t have a curfew or any limitations.
And disclaimer again, I live in France right next to Geneva, I work there from time to time, I have friends there but I never lived in Switzerland.


Wrangle out of the clutching, greedy hands of marketing departements the names “Abarth” and “Cooper”, then give them to actual performance workshops working on bettering affordable cars.


Avions Voisin - monocoque chassis as soon as 1923. The man behind (other) revolutionary cars as the Traction, The 2cv and the DS, Lefebvre, started there. For engineering marvels that the Voisin cars where, never forget that Monsieur Voisin graduated in …Fine Arts. Explains the bankruptcy I guess.


Dual citizen here, 2 European passports. A lot of counties do not recognise dual citizenship of their own citizen, so you get a warning that even if you legitimately hold another citizenship (which they can’t do nothing about), it is not recognised in any way. The other country, which does acknowledge dual citizenship, tells me that the passport I travel abroad with is the consular service I may call upon: it is expressly forbidden to seek assistance from 2 nations over one problem when abroad. That’s all the limits I see / experience.
Yup. Lightweight, Rigid, and Classy.
The “s” suffix is for Slim, which you don’t really need if it’s used at a desk in a fixed position. S series generally are lighter, slimmer (eh) and harder to repair / more fragile. That said, when careful, these are slim, elegant professional machines with excellent Linux support.
I’m daily driving my M2 mbp these days - smooth fedora experience, superior sound and screen, good battery life. I hope it comes soon to your machine!


Igorrr - can’t understand no one around me have ever heard about them.
French fries (from Belgium with mayonnaise)
I follow Hashtags, first. Sometimes someone says something I find striking, I check their post history & follow if really interesting. But mostly, hashtags.


The #Iran tag on mastodon is pretty active right now.
Have you read this? Beyond “the state of the internet”, I feel like they are sawing the branch they sit on.