That math does not check out. There are only 8.1 billion humans alive. How can there be trillions of companies?
Moderates @fluidmechanics@discuss.tchncs.de
That math does not check out. There are only 8.1 billion humans alive. How can there be trillions of companies?
Lemmyverse? How will that exist in the Fediverse?
Fediverse > Lemmy Galaxy / Cluster?
I just listened to the recorded phone call where Trump mentions this. Yes, he knew that he lost, but he was (at least back then) on a delusion that somehow the votes were either forged/miscounted etc. … all based on rumours from Trump media.
This is amazing. I never knew that Egyptian hieroglyphs had names for kingdoms in the Indian subcontinent.
Wallabag is like Pocket but self hosted and better.
Seems like this can be done in the browser using a user agent switcher.
For now.
He was from the future. Look, he’s reading from a book made of flexible glowing paper and not flat tablets like we primitive people do.
You could instead use the Web Archives extension. Works for most common paywalls.
It is not, Fairphone already does this.
Good point, and Łukasz Langa mentioned this in his talk (check it out). He names it the robustness principle, in his words (around 22:20
mark:
“Vague in what you accept, concrete in what you return”
But he also mentions some gotchas like how Iterable[str]
can backfire, because str
is also an Iterable[str]
and it might be better to use list[str]
.
It is important to recall of IPCC’s mission to be “policy neutral while being policy relevant and never policy prescriptive”. They try their best to be scientifically accurate, discuss the state and suggest solutions. One can wonder why IPCC won’t take sides and but that’s the way it has always been. The burden of what to do with their message is always upon the commons.
This statement is on a similar vein. While it was possibly guided at consoling common people from climate grief, it has all the risks of being misquoted.
Sync to Thunderbird. Tools > Export.
I know it is not ideal, but it works as long as Thunderbird is around.
If it is a pay what you want model I am all for it. This would be similar to how elementary OS st
The problem with a fixed price is you have to always calibrate it according to the economy of the user’s geolocation. What is cheap for a person from a developed world may be unaffordable for a third world county.