With Google Photos about to be paid, Amazon Photos has turned out to be a decent new home for my memories.

If you are a Google Photos user, you are probably already aware and if you are not, I will give you a summary: as of June 2021, unlimited free storage ends. Since then, everything uploaded will take up space on Google OneErgo, it will be time to checkout as we upload more and more photos.

It is something that users such as a server, who have been using the service since 2015 (when it was launched), we rate as a low blow. After getting used to the good stuff, Google ruthlessly took it away from us. I have my life uploaded to Google Photos, literally my first photo is from January 5, 2001, and frankly, this google move sat me down regulinchi.

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cómo ‘Ataque a los titanes’ se ha convertido en un fenómeno mundial (que llega a su final)

Fiel a la sobriedad estilística y de composición de viñetas que han caracterizado los 139 capítulos que componen ‘Ataque a los titanes’, Hajime Isayama finalizaba el popular manga que lleva publicando desde 2009 con varios paneles en los que confía a elementos cuasi bíblicos el desenlace definitivo de su tremendista distopía.

Más de una década después del oneshot que el autor presentó en 2006 a Shueisha, su historia ha llegado a su fin, al menos entre las grapas, dejando tras de sí un efusivo legado que no ha tenido reparos en coquetear con el militarismo o el patriotismo conservador japonés.

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eight titles to keep fit from home

It has been more than a year since COVID-19 entered our lives and turned our world upside down. Teleworking, restrictions and confinements have forced us to change our habits, and one of the most affected is that of sport and physical activity.

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Internet, let me forget

I, a wealthy European citizen, have always viewed the Amish with overwhelming moral superiority. Poor ignorant citizens, who resist the benefits of living in our time. They are already wanting to anchor themselves in the 18th century, they are already wanting to limit themselves and miss out on fun and pleasures. Almost three years ago I read in Quartz an even more crushing headline than my self-righteousness: “The Amish understand a life-changing truth about technology the rest of us don’t” (for lack of a better translation, apologies in advance).

In that article they said that the Amish use the rest of humanity as an experiment to test the very long-term implications of any innovation that comes into our lives. And only if that innovation is innocuous for their principles and values ​​do they end up assuming it. I still had zero desire to live the Amish life, but my moral superiority was left like a house of cards after the impact of a Boeing.

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