Hey, I'm on bluesky now too, if anyone wants to give me a follow. Probably won't post much, but it's gonna be silly when I do!
Sacabambaspis, my beloved ❤️🧡💛💚💙💜
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Hey, I'm on bluesky now too, if anyone wants to give me a follow. Probably won't post much, but it's gonna be silly when I do!
Sacabambaspis, my beloved ❤️🧡💛💚💙💜
ive basically.... given up on tumblr lmao.i can hardly reblog a post without it making my tablet take a massive shi t. i can hardly type this text post. gOd dam mi t,, i have so much to catch up on but i literally canno t work through this shit site.
avron replied to your post:avron replied to your post:avron replied to your...
I have been even less inclined than normal to look at news for a while now for that exact reason. I actually started thinking last night I’d like to be able to filter my Facebook feed for all mention of sport.
I've seen so many people express their wish for a cricket filter for Facebook this week and I'm just over here like 'I've seen more people wanting a cricket filter than I have seen posts about the cricket'
(x)
This Is Your Brain on Twitter
Another concern of Mr. Keller’s is the prediction by many that the smartphones we carry in our pockets will soon evolve into wearable computers — essentially turning us into cyborgs
Amplify’d from bits.blogs.nytimes.com
In his latest column for The New York Times Magazine, Bill Keller, The Times’s executive editor, likens clearing the way for his 13-year-old daughter to join Facebook to handing her “a pipe of crystal meth.”
I can’t say I have ever tried crystal meth, but I do visit social networks on a regular basis. Twitter, which Mr. Keller says he believes could make us “stupid,” has become an irreplaceable part of my daily life; it augments how I report stories, socialize with friends and share and consume everything from store coupons to breaking news.
Read more at bits.blogs.nytimes.com
See this Amp at http://bit.ly/jjesio