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Ahaha we’ve got you now!
Ahaha we’ve got you now!
That doesn’t sound safe. I hope you sent this message with your phone. If you did it from the old computer and happen to have valuable data please feel free to share your IP address, someone might appreciate it…
Me and my D&D group 👀
We should turn their name into an extreme political symbol symbol on the opposite side of their political spectrum. That way they’ll know that they’re also evil because they use that evil symbol.
I do believe 88 was just 2x the 8th letter of the alphabet which is H, which was short for what they say in the Hitlergruß.
This is a perfectly reasonable explanation to me and fits too well for this to seem like a coincidence.
Is it a chain though? I think it’s more of a branching network that (almost?) always is stopped at quantum physics and it’s theories or some form philosophy.
Emacs keybind?
I’d say much more highly abstracted than necessarily better (I know plenty of people who despise js and wouldn’t call it better).
I personally enjoy knowing that the communities I’m a part of are decentralised and don’t exist to show me ads. I also like being able to use an open source app to access them.
This is why I don’t like Reddit and wouldn’t call this a clone.
Honestly I think an emulation would be a better analogy.
I believe the folder you are attempting to refer to is for all users so you probably do want to have the config in ~/.config
unless you want everyone to have the same.
Also /home is the directory that includes all users respective ~/
directories so use ~/
when referring to your own home directory.
Edit I can’t figure out the formatting. My client is showing <sub>
where ~ should be.
Same in thunar (the xfce file manager)
I’m always more confused by adding integers to strings or something being an empty object because something else was undefined and the console didn’t bother to tell me.
~/.config :>
But the CPU would be thoroughly confused in many cases. Like if you added a number with a string. This means low level tools have too and therefore people who do low level programming are confused and the generally carefree has rules can make it difficult to debug js.
Also I think rust making you write “safe” code unless you explicitly tell it otherwise is a great thing.
So I think that tools telling the user that they’re doing something wrong is great, tools telling the user to stick with physical limitations for better performance are completely valid but what js does seem really weird with having constants be reassignable, making them nothing but labels combined with HTML I find it even more annoying.
Aahh you can’t just make this problem object oriented!
C programmers don’t like that.
Something along the lines of “I don’t know what this does, I wrote this code two weeks ago”
Tor acts as a proxy Tor browser is shipped with tor but using a different port. Tor is not the browser.
So as long as you set up what you want to use with tor and remember to start it, it should work. Otherwise I’m sure you could setup a pi or local server to route everything through tor if you wanted to.
Edit: I believe the tor network is a VPN though. Your data is sent privately through the virtual tor network. Not all VPN connections have to work the same, after all Hamachi is also a VPN.
Fair enough
Signal published their reply to a court subpoena that was funny.
My new favourite is asking GitHub copilot (which I would not pay for out of my own pocket) why the code I’m writing isn’t working as intended and it asks me to show it the code that I already provided.
I do like not having copy and paste the same thing 5 times with slight variations (something it usually does pretty well until it doesn’t and I need a few minutes to find the error)