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Suppafly
Joined 2,634 karma

  1. >Folks shouldn’t be afraid to “rediscover” stuff.

    Luckily no one is suggesting that.

  2. Is the input device on prior to turning the tv on? Some of them will automatically switch if an input is on or gets switched on.
  3. I had a similar issue with "ant", except it was horizontal and the game refused to acknowledge I had found it. I'm wondering if it only registers the ones that it initially generates and doesn't double check when you select others or something. I did notice when you move it, it updated the list to reflect that there were two aardvark's so I'm not sure why it didn't recognize the 'ant' that I located.
  4. It's not like Framework is choosing to do this just to screw consumers, their suppliers are raising the prices on them, so those increases have to pass through to the consumers.
  5. Lots of people working in different fields end up reinventing things that have been known to math for centuries, often in clunky roundabout ways. I imagine some of them figure out things not known to math, but it's far more likely to go the other way.
  6. > How did they only mate now?

    A lot of the differences between species is due to behavior issues, not actual physical difficulty. It's likely that both species of jay mate at different times or display different mating signals. They've been separated for something like 75 million years which leaves plenty of time for their behaviors to change.

  7. >Shouldn't the first sentence on that website describe what GNU Unifont actually is?

    Tons of these open source projects have the same issue.

  8. I don't understand these articles, they found 400' of wall and only have one picture in the article that shows like 3' of it.
  9. >The only thing that's different between the era when Bison as named and now is the proliferation. There is vastly more shit in open source with the cute names.

    I personally think that's a pretty good idea for coming up with better names instead of cute names now.

  10. I use those all the time when I want fried potatoes.
  11. >Can I just say !!!!!!!! Hell yeah!

    ...

    >THANK YOU!!

    Man you're way too excited.

  12. >People were happy when Netflix was the streaming service, but then everyone pulled their content and have their own (Disney, Paramount, etc.)

    This, it's been horrible ever since all of the content owners have pulled their content from netflix.

  13. >The engine of this browser is Webkit.

    Thank you, I looked all over their site trying to figure out which engine they were using.

  14. they added tabs to tabs
  15. I'm sure Barnes and Noble will have no problem with the name.
  16. I can't tell if this is real or real funny.
  17. >I think if you were a sysadmin and used to shell scripts, sed, awk, grep and xargs then perl probably made more sense than if you were a programmer from a more traditional language coming into the perl world.

    This, it was very unixy and felt like a natural progression from shell scripting. I think that's why a lot of early linux adopters were so enamored.

  18. They had a free distro for a while, it's was pretty exciting being real time and with a microkernel and such. As a CS student it was neat to see where the world of computing might have went if different decisions had been made in the past.
  19. >Plus, it alleges the Perplexity’s Comet browser is bypassing the paper’s paywall to deliver detailed summaries of those articles.

    I'm surprised news sites haven't started fighting back and sending false info to AI based browsers.

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