I had to look it up.
So I guess the joke here is that the guy has lost almost all his hair due to the stress of the incident.
I had to look it up.
So I guess the joke here is that the guy has lost almost all his hair due to the stress of the incident.
I’m amazed when companies can’t simply afford 100% remote work. IT’S FREE!
The app will probably get false positives anyway.
Look at your hands
WRINKLED
You still old, fuck
I expected a link to a source, but this is even better (matches with the little I remember)
Thanks!
What was the full story again? I’m googling but I can’t find it.
What is the context of the original image?
Why not Python? Because it needs print(str(x))?
LOL I made something similar to identify the language of a text.
Nah, 4chan is way less filtered.
You can’t make any kind of offensive joke here.
It sounds like this could be applied to the military too
This + ChatGPT
Edit: IDK why I exactly got the dislikes, but I can assure you that I was able to quickly get into Python 3 thanks to ChatGPT’s help. I didn’t even know what was a Python class when I started and now the most complex (yet still shitty) script that I have is full of them.
Chaotic good (3 displays) here
My old monitor is not going to waste :)
Or comments pending of mod approval.
Article summary:
Reddit, a popular online platform for discussions and news, has recently faced issues with increased API pricing and moderator-led shutdowns. As a result, users have been exploring alternatives such as Lemmy. Lemmy is a federated social platform that allows independent servers to communicate with each other. However, the user experience on Lemmy can be confusing, as it lacks the categorization and consolidation of Reddit. Additionally, the decentralized nature of Lemmy makes it difficult to discover niche interests and results in frequent server issues. The federated platforms also struggle with real-time message synchronization. Overall, Lemmy is still in its early stages and lacks the polish, diversity of content, and ease of access needed to compete with Reddit. Unless significant efforts are made to simplify the platform for average users, it is unlikely to gain widespread traction.
Beep boop, I’m a human and I summarized the article using a custom implementation of the gpt-3.5-turbo LLM model
You are complaining about people not using subs properly by doing the same exact thing…
Aside of the lack of ads, I now depend on Aurora Store for batch app updates because the cocksuckers at Google Play have allowed devs to force app version updates even when you have disabled automatic updates for that specific app.
Here’s my take