ADO is Azure DevOps. It had its name changed from TFS, Team Foundation Server. It's basically Jira made by Microsoft and it's a nightmare of over complicated and poorly named WebApp utilities that turn ticketing into a bureaucratic nightmare. Imagine them taking every suggestion ever given to them by companies and cobbling them together like Frankenstein, but never fixing any of the bugs or hiring a UI/UX designer.
That area is pretty cool, though it looks more convincing in photos (due to depth perception). It reminds me of the wall paintings in California Adventure.
It's not my preferred keyboard, so I haven't used it in a while. But as I remember, it was abandoned for a little while, and then there was a beta branch that was in development for some time. It's had somewhat regular development, so maybe this is its first official release in a while. While it is off-putting that it asks for contact access right away, I suspect that is so that contact names can be included in your word suggestions. It's a fairly common keyboard feature.
Didn't have this on my bingo card. Honestly it's compelling though. A cheaper machine with long-term support, this is a good option for a lot of people. Apart from a Mac Mini M1 I bought to use as a server years ago I've never purchased a Mac. Maybe I will now.
Not necessarily a reflection of happiness or quality of life (and health). Interesting nonetheless. I'm curious if there's correlation between general population wealth, warm weather, regional diets, potential for outdoor activities (hence warm weather, but also being coastal), and of course genetics.
I'm asking for too much, studies are long and complicated. Just want to outlive my kids here.
I have a daughter on the spectrum. It took many hours each week and many weeks in a year of ABA (RBT, hopefully getting my acronyms right) therapy to get her to accept a variety of foods. Fast forward to a few years later, she'll eat anything including spicy food (by her own choice). It was definitely a texture thing, as well as her wanting a constant she could reliably predict. As part of her therapy we always included something she liked alongside the things she didn't. We were firm she had to try everything every time, even if she couldn't finish.
Same. CrossCode was so good it took months for me to enjoy normal games again. It had everything I wanted and more.
I'm stoked for Alabaster!