We think you need it, just like you think we need your constant shitposting.
That's where you're wrong. My product recommendations are optional and can be freely ignore. Unsolicited advice about a person's health is usually an attempt to put yourself above that person, and, when that unsolicited advice is rejected out of hand as it should be, you will feel entitled to bitch at that person for not doing things your way. I got two words: suck it.
On a non-writing topic, this website will save your life: https://intensivedietarymanage... [intensived...gement.com]
I recommend starting here [intensived...gement.com], then reading around. There's many article series, with intermittent fasting being the most important.
What makes you think I would be interested in this unsolicited advice?
Because this is the fourth, fifth or sixth time that this particular AC told me that my writing sucks and then writes paragraphs about a literary debate I'm not interested in having.
But what if overall you have many negative reviews, and other people also laugh at you?
Being the proverbial fat boy on the short bus (a.k.a, fat retard), I'm used to negative reactions and being laughed at.
At what point can it become possible in your mind that you're a bad writer?
Never. Being a writer means you have to continuously improve yourself. What you write today won't be as good as something you write ten years from now.
The only Apple location that I know about in Palo Alto is the Apple Store. Although the Palo Alto Apple Store is the flagship store, I find it confusing as to why Apple needs a self-driving shuttle to take employees from the Cupertino campuses to Palo Alto. Between the Infinite Loop and the Mothership campuses in Cupertino, sure. But not Palo Alto.
This is probably the equivalent to Amazon's DASH buttons for specific items. Click the button and the item is automatically ordered. What some people found out that pressing button doesn't automatically order the least expensive version of that item. What was $10 last week could easily be $60 this week. I don't expect the verbal version to work any better.
I'm not pissed off, I'm genuinely fascinated that someone who misses all of Stephen King's points about writing seems to fancy himself a kind of "King 2.0."
I'm genuinely fascinated by trolls who waste their time responding to my comments, especially after I made it clear that I'm not interested in their opinions.
People told him he was a bad writer because he chose to write "scary" books - stories about monsters and ghosts, latter-day fairy tales.
Uh, no. The fact that Stephen King made a shitload of money is why he got cared a "bad writer" over the years. If he hade made no money, no one would have cared. America has a literary tradition that anyone who writes for money and/or popular with the masses must be a hack. I'm honored to wear that badge, especially if it pisses off my merry band of trolls on Slashdot.
We know your heart is in the right place. You don't want to entertain, write well, or tell an interesting story; you prefer vomiting on your keyboard and tricking people out of a few dollars.
I may be a terrible writer but at least I make money at being a terrible writer. I wouldn't make money with Medium. If I want to give my work away for free, I would publish at Fictionaut.
They didn't, so Apple is in trouble for letting you subscribe to third-party apps without providing all of this.
On the few occasions that an auto-renewal went through before I could cancel it, I just open a ticket to request a refund. Not sure why that is so difficult.
The largest payout I ever got was $35 for a class-action lawsuit against Amazon, which I thought was a bit small considering that I bought 800+ dead tree books over the years.
I got an email yesterday about class-action lawsuit against Apple for third-party auto-renewing apps purchased through iTunes. What is it about? Beats me. I'll probably get a $5 gift card to spend at the iTunes Store sometimes next year.
We think you need it, just like you think we need your constant shitposting.
That's where you're wrong. My product recommendations are optional and can be freely ignore. Unsolicited advice about a person's health is usually an attempt to put yourself above that person, and, when that unsolicited advice is rejected out of hand as it should be, you will feel entitled to bitch at that person for not doing things your way. I got two words: suck it.
What makes you think I would be interested in unsolicited advice about books and other stuff?
As of yesterday, 3,525 clicks from interested Slashdotters so far this month.
That weather prediction is an art and not a science?
On a non-writing topic, this website will save your life: https://intensivedietarymanage... [intensived...gement.com] I recommend starting here [intensived...gement.com], then reading around. There's many article series, with intermittent fasting being the most important.
What makes you think I would be interested in this unsolicited advice?
Can slashdot just go ahead and ban self-promotion/shilling in posts?
Take it up with management. Bitching in the comments won't change anything.
It's really god damn annoying, take your yard-sale somewhere else.
Feel free to go somewhere else, as I'm not violating the Slashdot TOS.
You are such a piece of shit and 100x worst than any troll I've seen here.
No, that would be the person who posted dick pics with my contact info.
How is that a trolling attempt?
Because this is the fourth, fifth or sixth time that this particular AC told me that my writing sucks and then writes paragraphs about a literary debate I'm not interested in having.
But it's clear that you are interested, creimer.
I'm always interested whenever a troll starts a thread that I'm not a part of by making a snide comment about my sexuality.
But what if overall you have many negative reviews, and other people also laugh at you?
Being the proverbial fat boy on the short bus (a.k.a, fat retard), I'm used to negative reactions and being laughed at.
At what point can it become possible in your mind that you're a bad writer?
Never. Being a writer means you have to continuously improve yourself. What you write today won't be as good as something you write ten years from now.
You're also not interested in your reader's reviews...
Reader's reviews should always be taken with a grain of salt, especially when the reviews are too negative or too positive.
The only Apple location that I know about in Palo Alto is the Apple Store. Although the Palo Alto Apple Store is the flagship store, I find it confusing as to why Apple needs a self-driving shuttle to take employees from the Cupertino campuses to Palo Alto. Between the Infinite Loop and the Mothership campuses in Cupertino, sure. But not Palo Alto.
If you include pagers, I'll be hitting my 30th anniversary with mobile devices.
Order a fire-proof and explosion-proof storage bags for your Samsung phone.
This is probably the equivalent to Amazon's DASH buttons for specific items. Click the button and the item is automatically ordered. What some people found out that pressing button doesn't automatically order the least expensive version of that item. What was $10 last week could easily be $60 this week. I don't expect the verbal version to work any better.
I'm not pissed off, I'm genuinely fascinated that someone who misses all of Stephen King's points about writing seems to fancy himself a kind of "King 2.0."
I'm genuinely fascinated by trolls who waste their time responding to my comments, especially after I made it clear that I'm not interested in their opinions.
The guy built a website. Hell I myself had a Geocities page, putting up a storefront is hardly mastermind criminal stuff.
This wasn't any storefront. It was the Amazon of the international black market. Sex, drugs and nuclear weapons were just a few offerings available.
People told him he was a bad writer because he chose to write "scary" books - stories about monsters and ghosts, latter-day fairy tales.
Uh, no. The fact that Stephen King made a shitload of money is why he got cared a "bad writer" over the years. If he hade made no money, no one would have cared. America has a literary tradition that anyone who writes for money and/or popular with the masses must be a hack. I'm honored to wear that badge, especially if it pisses off my merry band of trolls on Slashdot.
On my reading list is "American Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind Behind the Silk Road" by Nick Bilton. The author previously wrote "Hatching Twitter: A True Story of Money, Power, Friendship, and Betrayal", a great read about the accidental founding of Twitter, the shenanigans of the four cofounders who wanted to CEO, and everyone else who wanted to buy a revenue-less Twitter.
We know your heart is in the right place. You don't want to entertain, write well, or tell an interesting story; you prefer vomiting on your keyboard and tricking people out of a few dollars.
Thank you for the Stephen King reference. : p
He also avoid claps by being a terrible writer.
I may be a terrible writer but at least I make money at being a terrible writer. I wouldn't make money with Medium. If I want to give my work away for free, I would publish at Fictionaut.
I switched to DreamHost over a year ago. It's been the smoothest running service that I ever had for a web hosting provider. Highly recommend.
As opposed to live tree books?
As opposed to ebooks, which was covered by a different class action lawsuit. I got $15 out of that one.
They didn't, so Apple is in trouble for letting you subscribe to third-party apps without providing all of this.
On the few occasions that an auto-renewal went through before I could cancel it, I just open a ticket to request a refund. Not sure why that is so difficult.
The largest payout I ever got was $35 for a class-action lawsuit against Amazon, which I thought was a bit small considering that I bought 800+ dead tree books over the years.
I got an email yesterday about class-action lawsuit against Apple for third-party auto-renewing apps purchased through iTunes. What is it about? Beats me. I'll probably get a $5 gift card to spend at the iTunes Store sometimes next year.