![](https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/ee934fc2-e537-4512-baaf-9dfdf26565df.png)
![](https://programming.dev/pictrs/image/170721ad-9010-470f-a4a4-ead95f51f13b.png)
That’s just, like, your opinion…
That’s just, like, your opinion…
First OS: MS-DOS 5
First Linux (many years later): Yellow Dog on one of those dome-shaped iMacs with the PPC chips
It’s a described feature of a paid service though, so it goes a bit beyond just being nice. More importantly for me, the app also leaks memory insanely, at least in the latest Debian build. I spun up a Windows vm with ProtonVPN because the Linux experience (which, again, I pay for) was too frustrating
The answer is easy, but to get to it, a little bit of a thought experiment is probably helpful. I say, look to how we define our own left and right sides for guidance. When facing forward, our left hand is on the left side of our body, and the right hand is on the right side of the body. Perspective doesn’t matter, and there is no ambiguity.
Now we need to extend this to the bed. A bed has a head, just like a person does. So where would its face be? It seems clear to me, unless you are sleeping on a dead mattress, that the face is clearly going to be looking upwards at the ceiling at the head of the bed. So the left side of the bed, if you are standing at the foot of the bed looking at it, would be on your right. Just like the left side of your friend, when you are standing in front of them and looking at them, is on your right.
Now if you just imagine the mattress to be perfectly spherical and in a frictionless environment…
(Obviously just having fun with this answer, but it’s also the right answer)
The Venn Diagram of people who drive obnoxious gas-wasting vehicles like that and people who are assholes is a circle
The driver is a POS and people are allowed to have toys. There is no conflict between those positions.
Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords as a basis for a system of government.