

I believe vimium does this with T
Edit: Wait, you don’t even need that. It’s already built-in https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/search-open-tabs-firefox


I believe vimium does this with T
Edit: Wait, you don’t even need that. It’s already built-in https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/search-open-tabs-firefox


I think you should still be annoyed. By riding slowly in the fast lane, you are not encouraging people to ride more slowly; you are encouraging them to zip around the lanes which is extremely dangerous too. Further, many people might see a need to compensate for whatever speed they lost and accelerate even more. I would say that it is definitely not a good thing to do, not to mention that I don’t think that it is even legal in my country
I find it interesting that people who comment like this on harmless posts of people just having fun seem to tend to do so out of a fear of being considered cringe, yet it is this very response that makes them the cringe ones
I remember that I tried it a while ago and there was something that prevented me from actually changing. However, I tried it again now and although I don’t remember what that feature was it doesn’t seem to be missing anymore so I think that I’m going to try using it from now onwards!
go to swiftkey > language > add language and it looks like simply adding a german keyboard should do the trick.
It says:
Multilingual: You can type in any installed language that is supported by your current keyboard layout without the need to switch keyboards.
in gboard, at least, you can set two dictionaries for the same keyboard, which I think should theoretically prevent that from happening. If you’re using an iphone or another keyboard an equivalent feature might exist.
I know you’re probably just ranting but I’m going to say this anyway because I, too, had the same issue before discovering this
Is that even a mistake to begin with? English is not my first language, but as far as I know, you can have a person at work, no?


I don’t use forgejo actions. This bug doesn’t affect me, right?


This article gives me vibes that someone wrote a few lines outlining the situation and asked the AI to write the article itself. Interestingly though, I think most people would just rather read the outline, less time wasted and less llm.
A part that screams AI would be:
This wasn’t subtle venue security—your biometric data became part of the artistic statement, whether you consented or not.
“This isn’t this–it’s that” is an extremely common AI sentence structure, further exposed by the fact that the part before the em-dash doesn’t even make sense to begin with. No one was asking themselves whether it was part of subtle venue security.
As a sidenote, sometimes I read sentences like this and I wonder “could this ever even have been written by a human?” I think that there’s a very low chance that this article didn’t have at least some amount of AI involved, but I know that somewhere out there there must be some people who actually write like this. And that’s kind of sad.
tbh I don’t even know why I even wrote this, the entire article appears to be one big example of generic AI writing
Resume: Either get married and be made to watch on a man’s phone Either don’t get married
used to refer to a situation in which there is a choice between two different plans of action, but both together are not possible
Thus, if you want to truly feel that pedanticness, getting married or not getting married is, by definition, an either-or situation, since you can’t be married and not married at the same time.
Questionable though my reasoning my be taking the context into account, get outpedantic-ed!


I probably have forgotten more programming languages than you can list, and if there are constants in programming, then a) while compilers get better at catching bugs, they never got over the basics, and b) a good programmer will alyways be better at preventing and catching bugs than a compiler.
I agree with this
Once you have aquired a good mindset about disciplined programming, those buglets a compiler (or even code review systems) can find usually don’t happen.
I also agree with this.
I would like to put a lot of emphasis in the usually. It doesn’t mean that they don’t happen, no human being makes no mistakes. Rust simply gives people a little more peace of mind knowing that unless they use unsafe they’re probably fine in terms of memory issues.
As a side note, there was this once I was making an ecs engine in rust, and kept fighting the compiler on this issue. Specifically, the game engine bevy uses Query in the World to retrieve information about the game state, and I wanted to do the same. For instance, in the following function (or something similar, I honestly don’t remember all that well):
fn getplayer(player: Query<Player>) {}
Would get player from the world and assign it to player (more or less). However rust was adamant in not letting me do this. After some thinking I finally realized why
fn getplayer(player: Query<Player>, player_too: Query<Player>) {}
Would give two mutable references to the same Player in the same function, which can be very easily mishandled, and thus is not allowed in rust.
I don’t know about the MISRA standard, but I don’t think that using it would have changed the way I coded my inherently flawed approach. This is a small example, one that didn’t even matter that much in the grand scheme of things and could be even hard to understand why it’s bad without knowing rust, but it is the one that came to mind. I think that if I had more experience I would he able to give you one that actually had security implications.
I’m no seasoned programmer, however


It’s the bugs that even evade a seasoned programmer that poses the problems, and there, Rust won’t help either
What do you mean these are not the ones that rust tries to fix? Even huge projects like the linux kernel get memory bugs. I don’t know anything about ADA and nor do I want to “evangelize rust” but what you’re saying sounds boggers.
Obviously rust cannot prevent all bugs or even most of them. It can only prevent a small subset of bugs, but saying that that “small subset of bugs” wouldn’t happen to seasoned programmers is just wrong, especially when you have tons of programmers working on the same big project.
I don’t mean to say that rust is always the correct choice, but that you’re waving off its greatest offering as bicycle training wheels (i.e. something no seasoned programmer would need)


Why the fuck do I need to verify whether I’m an adult


deleted by creator


Yep! What I wanted was for a “just works” experience as much as possible. Having to manually install lsps and treesitter parsers manually with nix felt like a bummer, honestly. It does work though


I don’t get why using an unsigned value is bad in this context. Like you’ve said yourself, why would you add support for dates that happened before the creation of the network?


In my comment I said:
I could understand this comment in the context of the app
And the whole reason why I commented was because I’d misunderstood your comment. I’d thought it was separate from the post itself, since you hadn’t made it clear that the purpose of your comment was to say something like: “So despite the consequences it might have to the men featured in the app, it should still exist due to the benefit that it would bring to women”. Without that, to me, it really just looked like you’d read the stories from the men and thought “women have it worse”.
Since I’m now inside the discussion, I’m gonna give you my two cents.
I think that most people here weren’t really mad at the app due to its purpose. They were mad because it’s far from a perfect solution. Regardless of how much protection the app has, at these issues will exist:
Not to mention that, in this case, the creator was a man and the information protection was laughably bad.
In the future, apps like this one might become a must for women’s self-protection, but that doesn’t mean that the app’s issues will just cease existing. Pointing them out along with personal experiences to back them up, and then weighing in the pros and cons is always going to be very important.
Might’ve made myself a bit unclear, here’s a tl;dr
I thought you’d meant
This bad situation happened to me
Women have it worse
But what I’ve realized what you’d meant is
This bad situation happened to me
But that doesn’t mean that the app shouldn’t exist
And to finish, sorry that that happened to you. I hope you and the people you talked about stay safe.


I don’t want you to take me badly, but to me this comment sounded really demeaning. Obviously women have it way worse than men, but you see a comment with a men venting about their personal experiences and the first thing that comes to mind is “women have it worse”?
I could understand this comment in the context of the app, and how people are making fun of it when its purpose is to try to solve such a common and awful problem in dating–but in the context of the comments of men venting here, it really just sounds like you’re invalidating their experiences just because they’re not women.
I believe it’s AI slop. I checked until 2012 and unless I missed something, there isn’t a single year where the list goes “France, Turkey, Canada, Indonesia.” In proper AI fashion, it looks correct at first glance but the further you go the worse it tends to get. The information could be from another source, but the hammer in china tells me otherwise.