I’ve only worked for about a year as coder. I’ve used LLM extensively for work. I kinda feel bad that I might be lazying out on actually learning how to do it myself.
I’ve only worked for about a year as coder. I’ve used LLM extensively for work. I kinda feel bad that I might be lazying out on actually learning how to do it myself.
This is why I while I’d love to have pets I don’t want the animals or the neighbors suffer.
Problem is that Luna means moon (a planet’s satellite) in romance languages like Spanish. If we’re giving proper toponyms for the earth’s satellite itself and its subdivisions, we should try and avoid generic names like Luna .
To be honest, I am tempted to use one of the edgier domain names in my CV just to see their reaction. I’m tired of faking everything’s perfect just so the crazies at LinkedIn doesn’t send my cv to trash bin.
Emails like user@cocaine.ninja
is fine for random internet shitposting, but if I had to use cockmail for anything involving real life responsibilities I’d go for domains like airmail.cc
or firemail.cc
at registration.
Does Google allow de-linking between accounts that were linked previously, then? I’ve seen people holding into a Google account just because it’s keeping hostage other accounts they actually care about.
Duolingo lost me when they decided to do away with user discussions. Can’t believe they threw away all that.
OP: Hello. Here is something useful that searches for alternate front ends that are operational when you need to access privacy invasive services.
ITT: throws a fit because it lets someone to do something they don’t like
This is why us privacy conscious folks are labeled freaks and weirds. Not because we reject privacy invasive services, but we can’t deal with anything that isn’t absolutely perfect.
The .onion
means it’s an onion service. This requires a Tor connection both for the host and the users. And frankly, hosting an onion service is not exactly easy to do it right, due to additional security considerations. Many self hosting guides assume a typical residential connection or a rented VPS without an onion service.
Then there’s the issue between scientific jargon that is different from general public use. A scientific theory has a specific definition, but it’s easy for general population to dismiss them as “just a theory”.
Brand of the 4g router?
In Korean we have these conjugated forms. They both sound the same:
[
(from 낫다) be/become better ][
(from 낳다) give birth (to a baby) ]So when given A as an example:
(A) 감기에 걸렸어요. I got a cold.
(B) 빨리 나으세요! Hope you get better soon!
© 빨리 낳으세요! Hope you give birth soon!
For some reason Koreans across all ages write C instead of B by mistake. It became a national joke at this point and some do it ironically on purpose. I used to teach Korean. Imagine my face every time.
There are more but I’m on my phone. Will do more later.
Confusing between hay‐ay
is at least understandable (forgetting the letter). Confusing between hay-ahí
is what makes my blood boil.
I would have loved this as a drunk college kid at 2 am.
The message speaks well of my situation, but that doesn’t mean I’ll buy a fucking Sneakers™ like a mindless consumer drone. FUCK™ YOU™ BRAND™
Its the same for all East Asian countries as well, but I guess slapping JAPAN
on it means fast upvotes, like that "Place, Japan"
meme.
I see. The authorized-app-only approach was deal breaker in my case, as I needed imap/smtp. Hope it works for you well.
Remember that banking and finance is full of regulations, and have moving speed of snail. Opposite of IT. When asked for something like this (open source or cross compatibility or anything nerdy) the first question is “who will be liable for losses and damages when something breaks?”.
Liability is probably the biggest factor. When something isn’t working properly, they want to be able to point fingers at someone and blame them. The vendor then blames someone else. Open source tends to be the polar opposite, which means huge red flags - hippie stuff, no payment, no liability, no pointy-blaming game.
Or so I’ve heard from people working in that sector. For places as conservative as them to deploy FOSS solutions, you’ll need the government branches cooperating with clearly worded laws and regulations, dragging them kicking and screaming into adoption.
And that’s assuming no one will lobby against in the process.
Its very ingrained on me that a proper business should be able to spare a few on a domain for themselves, as I remember it before the dot-com bubble.
Now? Websites have been displaced by social media altogether and many small business simply prefer having an Instagram profile, for example.
I’m dreading for the day they introduce dynamic pricing based on who’s buying and refuses to sell without a full face scan.