So if you want hear some spooky shit. Some context of this post.
tl;dr You are the first person who stared face first at the Demon Core. I was starting at the exposed core of Reactor 4 in Chernobyl and didn't know it.
That name, is not supposed to be like that. And what was happening was it was deleting or rather writing over pieces of the 256+ (which is another qemu bug) backing chain and was never caught by our monitors because it was an unknown unknown or machine check fault I guess you could say in programming language.
In short 6 months worth of medical data were lossed without backup because the backups just copy the qcow2 but never check chain integrity (because why would you ever build backup test functionality into your product?).
Anyways the company is under litigation because of this and the two people that found this are now out of work, not in retaliation but because of declining revenue, customer pulled out (I would too).
@cramleir Hmm… you misunderstood. 😉
It's not about "ASD may give you …", it's about leveling with people who use inappropriate and discriminatory words, and often simply won't stop. By replying to them at their own level, they start to listen.
I've tried it, works every time. They either start listening and get to know you, or they stop bothering you.
No one is "pretending", nor it was suggested that way by saying "abnormal is above normal".
There are people you can only reach if you level with them, they only respond if you use their own language.
In fact, the reason they use such inappropriate and discriminatory words, such as, "abnormal", is because they see themselves higher than people with disability (PWD). PWDs need to make a stand and show they are equals, instead of cowering.
Saying "abnormal = above normal" is a response to people who discriminates against PWD because they see themselves above PWD and won't listen until you make a stand.
😃
If you’re a U.S. citizen registered to vote, and you speak English + another language that’s spoken by 5% or more of your local population (tip: in most cities, that’ll include Spanish), consider signing up as an #election worker.
The law requires that anywhere with 5% or more speaking a given language, every polling place needs at least one person who speaks that language.
In my area, the number of polling places is directly limited by English-#Spanish #bilingual poll workers.
Wrote a post earnestly pointing out mainstream queerphobia and the dehumanizing power of how a story is being reported; and because I need everyday people to understand what I'm saying, I tried very hard to say it in their language.
In reply I got one person who wants to argue with me that liberalism is actually what I know to be leftism. And another person who said "in America there is only the right."
I literally put "the right" and "liberal" in quotations to demonstrate common usage.
@tyil most browsers have native and efficient impls of the webassembly standard now. There's no transpiling into different JS, and both speed and size improvements made. If you have resource-intensive part of your web-app just implement in C, Rust or other supported language.
In terms of cramming everything in the browser I wholly agree: Please don't. Though I think with Wasm/WASI we get closer to a paradigm where we can ditch the browser. More local-first stuff, polyglot development, etc.
Chinese does this to itself all the time. Most words are two-syllable, two-character words. Often when you look up the meaning of the first character it literally means the same thing as the two-character word.
That's because over the course of 2000 years of language evolution, loss of tones and phonemes from Classical Chinese and the addition of new words in the vocabulary, that first syllable has become too ambiguous in the spoken language.
In an analogy, to tie it back to the top:
- do you mean cuddle, the act of physical intimacy, or cudele, the sea creature?
- yeah I meant the cuttle fish
- ok, got you
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