Weirdo. That’s how I mark my property.
- 0 Posts
- 9 Comments
That feels like the Reddit of old - extreme niche memes but proper context in the comments. That’s how you learn nowadays!
Dnn@lemmy.worldto
Dad Jokes@lemmy.world•Today, my son asked, “Can I have a bookmark?” I burst into tears—11 years old and he still doesn’t know my name is Brian.English
2·2 years agodeleted by creator
A few more years tops.
Nobody has the right to live inside your body except yourself.
deleted by creator
Oh, many more were upset - just too lazy to inconvenience themselves with switching platforms.
Dnn@lemmy.worldto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Please don't repeat the same mistake as LinuxEnglish
162·3 years agoI won’t nitpick how Linux is a kernel not an OS but how is it not widespread? It just runs basically the whole internet…
The reasons the average Joe doesn’t use it for their desktop are convenience (Windows and macOS come pre-installed) and that you can run into technical issues due to bad support by hardware vendors. The latter is a chicken/egg problem and will possibly never be resolved.
Anyway, I disagree it’s due to the number of choices - we don’t need monopolies. Your grocery store is full of different brands of cheese and all of them still stay in business.
learning programming is BORING
Then it’s not for you. No shame in that. I don’t understand the notion that everyone is supposed to be a coder now.
If anything, the low-level coding part is something AI models may well make obsolete relatively soon. Unlike any craftsmanship - why not learn masonry or carpentry instead?
Dnn@lemmy.worldto
Risa@startrek.website•None of you will convince me that this wasn't foreshadowingEnglish
22·3 years agoit was always other people doing the inventing
True about all products. And yet, people write books about Steve Jobs and talk about all those company founders that developed nothing themselves except the very first version. Management is a crucial part of success.



The way umlauts or often used in memes like this one, the authors seem not to be aware that they are pronounced differently than the corresponding vowel.