Yeah, the style of syntax originated in LISP. The technical name is S-expressions.
But yes, the basic syntax rules are extremely simple. It's rather when you actually want to do something with that syntax that it takes some thinking...
Damn, sounds like a good fucking regulation, when not even Facebook wants to violate it.
But in general, I feel like targetted political advertising is a big reason why democracies are currently going south. Previously, you had to pick a position as a politician.
You might've had different billboards in the poor part of town than in the rich part, but at least, it was public and could be reported on. With targetted advertising, you can promise opposing sides of a conflict that you're on their side, or at least not mention to one side what you're promising the other side.
Man, I wish them all of the luck in the world, but I have never seen a 3D platformer with tight movement and you do need tight movement for a brutally hard game, otherwise it just feels brutally bullshit.
Hmm, Debian and other long-term support distros are kind of in a tricky position with problems like these. On the one hand, they don't want to break things, so they'll often make changes like these relatively late. But on the other hand, someone might still run a current version of the distro in 2038, so they actually want to solve it as early as possible, too.
I haven't looked into modding yet, but from what I understand, most Morrowind mods should work seamlessly. It's only those that need the Morrowind Script Extender, which don't work in OpenMW.
The distinction is just semantics in my mind, too, yeah. I hold the same position as agnostics, in that I do not believe this whole god concept can be disproven, because it is not rigorously formulated like a scientific thesis.
But I put that as "I do not believe that there is a god" and respectively I call myself an atheist, because well, there's many other things which cannot be disproven, like for example Big Foot.
And if a kid were to ask me, whether Big Foot exists, I'm not going to lead with "we really can't know". That's just misleading.
I guess, agnostics differentiate between gods and Big Foot, because there's so many more people who are convinced of these gods' existence. But yeah, I don't do that either, because I've seen how many people are willing to believe climate change isn't real. Lots of people believing something is just not an argument to me anymore.
As an internet and real-life atheist ...yeah. Most atheists just don't talk much about their non-belief, because there isn't much to talk about, so in dedicated atheism communities, you mostly see those that are almost anti-theist...
Yeah, I do greatly enjoy pulling out this map whenever someone says "only those weirdos in <region/language> do it the other way around". Nono, it's actually a pretty even split. 🙃
an application's files can be updated while the application is running, and
there's an OS-wide updater (i.e. package manager) with which you can update most software, including Firefox. (You can also get Firefox with its built-in auto-updater, but most people prefer the OS-wide updater.)
Both of these are good things. But Firefox, with its relatively advanced multi-process architecture, had a problem here, because it could happen that its files got updated while it was running and then when it started a new process, this new process might be incompatible with the old processes, therefore unable to communicate correctly.
Their initial solution was to force you to quit Firefox and reopen it, when they detected that the files had changed and you did something in Firefox which might need a new process, so primarily when opening a new tab.
I'm guessing, they now implemented a way to launch the new process by still using the old files from before the update.
Yeah, I do like that you can just pick another instance to create your community. Like, yeah, it has disadvantages, too, in that new users may need to sign up to multiple communities, but it makes communities a lot less 'serious'. You don't need to agree with the moderators of every community, because you can choose or create a different one.
I do also like that you can choose to only subscribe to e.g. one out of three communities for an interest of yours, in case you don't want the firehose of all posts ever shared about the interest.
I find it so bizarre, too. I've been using quite a similar autosuggestion feature as part of Fish shell for a few years now. But when an LLM keeps spewing words at me, that's a whole different shtick. It genuinely just inhibits my thinking, which is a feeling I never had with Fish.
I guess, one difference is that Fish uses real intelligence, a.k.a. my shell history. If it has a suggestion, the chance is high that it's actually what I want to do or close to it. And it also shuts the hell up when there's no good suggestion. I don't have to be constantly vigilant that what it suggests might be complete garbage.
And the other difference is probably that it's my intelligence, my shell history. I will have thunk the thoughts before which lead to the command it suggests, which brings the brain load much further down again.
Occasionally, it'll suggest something where I have no recollection of having run that command before, but knowing that I have, is still really useful and this only happens for niche commands anyways. Most of the suggestions are just stuff which I've run a few minutes ago or last week or such, where I won't have to think about it.
I guess, it probably also helps that commands have simple formatting, with only a single line and you can mostly read the flags in any order...
Krass, in der Außenansicht könnte man teilweise meinen bei der Endlagersuche passiert einfach nichts. Mir ist bewusst, dass das Quatsch ist, dass da Geologen kontinuierlich Gesteinsmassen scannen und bewerten. Aber dass es Teil eines so großen Budget-Topfs ist, hätte ich nicht gedacht.
This would've been a much more exciting article, if it was actually supported across the web and not just in Chromium...