Little bit of both, probably.
Little bit of both, probably.
What even makes the noon high?
Completely ridiculous. Everyone knows that barcodes belong to the back of the head, not forehead.
I don’t see how this empowers musk in any way, but I’d like to not have ai trash on my feed.
Oh great, AI generated political memes are here
You can’t make this shit up
had to use a different spelliings at backend and frontend, otherwise it wouldn’t work.
Fucking 4 days.
I am, therefore I think
You don’t have to buy an entire new pc for that.
It can be your fault, but if the distro is supposed to be easy and you haven’t messed with its internals, it’s probably the distro’s fault.
My #1 priority when choosing a distro was that it’s widely used and easy, because I don’t want to deal with that exact kind of shit.
I ignored it since I haven’t seen it in context. Is it at the exact same spot?
I watched the video. It talked about things I vaguely knew of, and it was interesting to see more context and how they connect together.
I used bonjourr a bit more, here’s another line of the weather greeting that really needs improvement:
// - Replaced "highest" with a better fitting synonym, which is generally used for weather
// - The "today" at the end made the sentence flow awkward. Now it says "day's highest" instead, which also a common way to phrase weather forecasts
"with a high of <temp1>° today": "ja päivän ylin lämpötila on <temp1>°",
Think the unit should be included in the temp variables instead?
Audible plop as it comes out.
Having that thing come out would be horrifying, but so would be taking it in. That’s some alien shit right there.
I think I’d say it like this:
"Lämpötila tällä hetkellä on <temp1>°"
/ "Temperature at this moment is <temp1>°"
"Lämpötila tällä hetkellä on <temp1>° ja tuntuu kuin <temp2>°"
/ "Temperature at this moment is <temp1>° and feels like <temp2>°"
It looked machine translated, as no native speaker should make this kind of mistake, but the rest seem a lot better.
I’m not sure about any rules about including C after the degree sign, but local services seem to do that.
I feel like it might be too entrenched already. I’ll watch the video, haven’t seen it.
I was just thinking of how to explain this the best. In Finnish, you can’t say “It is this or that (in here)” when talking about weather or anything else. This type of use of the word “it” just doesn’t exist in the language.
Edit: Also, language names are not capitalized in Finnish.
Nah, the drink is just american sized