linked added to the OP....odd, I posted it as a link, but added an image which seems to be the only visible content.
Sorry, new here & confused by stuff.
linked added to the OP....odd, I posted it as a link, but added an image which seems to be the only visible content.
Sorry, new here & confused by stuff.
Debian had a very long and painful public debate to eventually depend exclusively on systemd, from Red Hat. I'm not so sure they choose wisely to heavily depend upon RH/IBM LGLP code.
The new release is the first ever, I think, to offer non-free software by default.
Personal opinion is that Gentoo had it right all along. They spend a lot of time & man hours ensuring pretty much anything coming from Red Hat, that isn't being filtered by Linus, is optional. They created eudev, elogind & made Gnome portable again when Red Hat tried to shut down portability. Neddy shows that you can run a bleeding edge system whilst not depending on much at all from Red Hat over the past 15yrs or so.
Nice!
Seems wild this type of tool could have been used for possibly hundreds of thousands of years and the current academic consensus is 'not sure what they were doing with it tbh'.
We need more threads about not talking about that thing that we have been talking about too much.p
Yay!
Someone mentioned the Piri Reis Map without also mentioning Atlantis.
Thank you :)
Fair enough, I found both articles a little silly and in the latter one it seemed very much like using humans as the yardstick of evolution, especially with the anthropomorphic dinos on the article and that all the traits the dinos could have achieved in the authors imagination are human traits.
They outnumber us at the very least 10 to 1 and have a wider global distribution than humans. Don't fall for the "Birds Aren't Real" stuff, they are real, they are dinosaurs, and they are likely prepped to rise again....literally on the hot currents of air we are providing them.
The way humanity is going at the moment it doesn't seem unreasonable that our dinosaur cousins could become dominant again for a few million years at some point.
I think the little prick is out of jail now.
Maybe he's got Shorty Shitstain's Album too.
It's probably to do with how you are accessing it. If it's a browser, just click the link, don't 'open in new tab' or try a different link.
Other option is to search 'plants' of similar and filter by community.
I don't mean mass spam.
I won't be archiving Reddit, but I am grabbing a few subs.
If someine posts a question about a something obscure, like a particular old appliance repair as mentioned and a someone has a relevant post archived it may be helpful to post a quote, or link to a pastebin alongside a comment.
Much of the useful content on Reddit is often found by clicking on a recent thread where someone has helpfully linked to an older, more complete, answer.
I don't mean spam c/tea with pics from r/tea for Lemmy karma but if someone has a question about the mineral content of 1960's F1 yixing clay and I've got an excellent archived post from some yixing expert 8yrs ago on r/tea covering it beautifully, as I have an archive and tools set up to search it, I'd consider posting it.
I think current solution is grab r/appliancerepair or whatever archive and search/grep it.
I was more meaning if the die hard c/repairappliance guys had access to the r/repairappliance sub archive they could quickly retrieve and post a repevant 5yr old Reddit comment for a new OP in the way that one may search though a meme or gif reaction folder.
No
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bVjzH-UbP6E