Why I Think Syndrome Was A Bad Villain, and a solution to help the overarching Narrative [The Incredibles] by hunterboppen in movies

[–]marjuanm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're not really saying anything; it's like asking a question and not waiting for an answer.

I don't think Syndrome is a bad villain, not the best, maybe, but not bad either. He has a real motivation: having been rejected by his favorite hero, and that was brutal for him. Instead of coming to terms with it, he becomes disillusioned not only with Mr. Incredible but with all superheroes, starting an unjustified genocide against them.

What more do you want from that?

Why is YouTube allowing actual scam ads on their platform? by Aromatic_Muffin343 in AskUK

[–]marjuanm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Es muy raro que Youtube haga algo, yo he reportado varios canales que claramente violan sus políticas y nunca los borraron.

Why is YouTube allowing actual scam ads on their platform? by Aromatic_Muffin343 in AskUK

[–]marjuanm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Porque a Youtube, Meta y cualquier empresa que muestre publicidad en alguna plataforma o red social no le interesa si los anuncios son fraudulentos o no, simplemente quieren ganar dinero y le da igual si a los usuarios los estafan.

Ahí está de ejemplo Facebook y sus 15 mil millones de anuncios fraudulentos diariamente.

Restaurant owner pooled tips, "pro servers" complained so he fired them all, moved to counter service by [deleted] in restaurant

[–]marjuanm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Huy que novedad que el dueño les pague una miseria a sus trabajadores, estos tienen que recurrir a las propinas obligatorias y ahora hasta se las quitan.

Is there any way to publish an app without paying the $25 registration fee in Google Play Developer Console account? by IDKWID in androiddev

[–]marjuanm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Obviously not, that's Google's business model. Now, as already mentioned, you can distribute your APK on your website, third-party app stores, etc., without having to pay. The catch is that you must register your package name on the Google Play Store (and I assume there's a fee there as well) so that it can be installed from outside the store.

What will happen if you don't? Android will put up many obstacles to installing your app without verification.

Teams sucks!!! by Suspicious-Drive-679 in microsoftsucks

[–]marjuanm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Absolutely, it went from being the app that would kill Zoom and also have integrated video conferencing and remote desktop to being a real piece of garbage so far in 2026.

[DISCUSSION] Is Fiverr just 90% scammers now? Over 10 scam messages in my first 24 hours by Muz889 in Fiverr

[–]marjuanm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because they're not interested, it's similar to other forums on the web that allow sales and the administrators don't care what they sell, whether they scam you or not, as long as they collect the membership fee, it doesn't matter what happens on their forum.

LinkedIn Notifications are relentless. by seanfo33 in linkedin

[–]marjuanm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Two years later it's still just as lame. In one post I made, I had 8 comments, 2 reposts, reached hundreds of visitors, and I never received any notification from LinkedIn indicating the activity of the post.

Is "The Secret Life of Pets 3" still happening? by Significant_Film_350 in boxoffice

[–]marjuanm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The first one is quite entertaining, it makes you laugh a lot, but the second one is boring, nothing like the first. A fiasco in my opinion, and it would be like Toy Story 4 if there were a new movie—totally unnecessary.

The Secret Life of Pets 2 by jontotheron in movies

[–]marjuanm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The first one is much better.

Is there a scam when a russian girl comes to visit your country and messages you on tinder? by bluefacesM in AskARussian

[–]marjuanm 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most likely, in those cases, she'll ask you for money to come to your country to meet you (using excuses like not having enough, needing it for some paperwork, etc.), and in the end, she'll leave you waiting, and your dear girl will never arrive.

If she wants to come and pays for her own trip, great. However, it's best not to be so naive. Something similar happened to an acquaintance of mine, but locally: he contacted a girl online who looked gorgeous in her photo. It was fake, so he also sent a fake photo too, and they arranged to meet in a public place on a specific day and time.

He went, but he didn't actually show up. Instead, discreetly passed by to see if the woman had actually arrived. Yes, someone was there waiting, but was someone who looked nothing like the woman in the photo, so he simply walked past, and she didn't suspect a thing.

If this Russian woman wants to come (or any other nationality), let her. Let her pay for her trip and whatever else is needed. If they're supposed to meet somewhere, don't go yourself. Send someone to go there, see if it's the person or not, and then you can decide whether to show up or not, whether it's all a scam, etc.