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335
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I'm not talking about random followers. I'm talking about how to keep in touch and get closer to people who you just met. Like sure you exchange numbers, but then what? You might text them to go do an activity. But that's only every so often.

    I guess I just don't know how it works, and I see everyone exchanging Instagram posts and in group discords and I don't know how to be included and involved

  • But I'm really lonely and I think I need friends.

  • This is so wrong. I would absolutely prefer no comments over incorrect comments, which is exactly what happens when things get over commented

  • That's not uncommon for doctors offices and such

  • This isn't really true from what I know. Finasteride only prevents hair loss, and really only scalp here from my understanding.

  • I run arch and use the KDE beta package repo. Literally no problems. No idea what everyone is talking about here.

  • Exactly this. Anyhow makes error handling in rust actually a joy. It's only something you need to consider if you're writing a library for others to use, and in that case, it's good that rust forces you to be very very explicit

  • That syntax looks atrocious

  • Are you using an IDE like rustrover? Rust is by far the easiest language I've worked with. It makes it so the only way to write code is the right way

  • Terrible meme. Go is bad and you should feel bad

  • Also than*

  • Fucking goats?

  • Primitive communism existed for thousands of years

    This is fundamentally flawed. You can't compare primitive societies to modern states. The reason communism worked in primitive societies is the same reason communism works in families. It's not something that can just be expanded to thousands of millions of people who don't know each other

  • TV weather people saying that the temp will be in the 80s is less useful to me than if they tell me if it will be 27°C for example

    Well this isn't really an accurate comparison. If they know an exact temperature, they would say it in both measurements. But they don't. So "in the 80s" is the perfect range. Preparing for 80 degrees is almost identical to how you would prepare for 89 degrees. There's no metric equivalent. The "20s" is way too big of a range. 20 vs 29 is a huge difference. Also, with it being base 10, you don't really need more information. 80 is 80% hot. Think of the hottest weather you've been in. 80 degrees is about 80% of that. And before you say "I've been in 115 degree weather". Yeah, so have I, I lived in arizona, and 115 is honestly not too much different than 100. After 100 it doesn't matter much. Same with below 0. But the 0-100 range, each degree matters quite a bit

  • This. Fahrenheit is by far the better temperature scale for talking about environmental temps

  • The web is literally unusable without ad blockers. Your question is like asking "why should I stop bashing my face into the wall?"

  • well more like he played and let me watch. He seemed pretty disinterested with it.

    Was he more excited about his cup-and-ball?

  • This means, that there isn’t that much testing before the release. This can cause lots of problems for the end user.

    Lol you're buying into the FUD. ubuntu doesn't test every possible combination of packages, nor do they test how updates actually impact the user. Generally updates are always good for users. They fix bugs. 99% of the time someone comes to a linux forum asking about an issue, the answer is "this was fixed in the latest kernel, try updating". But because they're using distros that use ancient, 3 year old kernels, they can't.

    Unless you have a staging computer where you stage your updates, you're living in an illusion about "stability", and using ancient tools with ancient bugs for no reason

  • Arch has an installer script now. It's literally 1 command and you get a fully working system

  • I haven't had an arch update break shit in almost a decade.