Show newer

@vaartis Thanks. Do you know whether this has anything to do with that usr-merge fuckery I keep hearing about?

@veer66 I think most people are given some principles while growing up and then they stop thinking and spend their lives trying to reconcile facts with them.

@veer66 In the very long term, probably. That said, I suck at making predictions, but that's what all the changes from PHP7 onwards hint at.

@veer66 I work with PHP and I very much like where it is going. My bet is that someday it will become a compiled language like C.

@veer66 If it helps, the 21st century US-Euro-centric so-called ‘left’ has nothing to do with pre-WW2 Left.

Ideologies don't exist anymore. People are just guided by hatred and fear these days.

josemanuel boosted

Hopelessness isn’t natural. It needs to be produced. If we really want to understand this situa- tion, we have to begin by understanding that the last thirty years have seen the construction of a vast bureaucratic apparatus for the creation and maintenance of hopelessness, a kind of giant machine that is designed, first and foremost, to destroy any sense of possible alternative futures.
1/4

@vaartis That makes sense too. My grandma was 95. Her body barely functioned at that time.

@vaartis My grandma couldn't eat tomato seeds. We were told she couldn't digest them and they gave her diarrhea. Hope that's not your case.

To be honest, I wouldn't want to invest in a country that has a tendency to shut its borders for years, or even centuries, for the darndest reasons. Call me weird, but I don't find that trustworthy, business- or otherwise.

Some of the places I stayed in when I was there years ago were forced to close due to the pandemic. 赦せない.

The Japan Times  
Tokyo’s reemergence as a investment destination was one of the more surprising trends of last year. https://www.japantimes.co.jp/commentary/2024/01...

@vaartis That makes sense. I do object to referring to sucking tomato juices through a hole as “eating a whole tomato raw”, though, but that's just me.

Are you planning to do something with the seeds? This could be the beginning of a beautiful hobby.

@BitBun As I always say to everybody in your same situation, “if you build it, they will come.”

@vaartis Do you do that often? Either way, why? Did you make much of a mess?

I like to repost job offers because I was unemployed for a long time years ago, and I don't want anyone to have to go through that. Recently, I decided to make a rule of reposting requests for meetups, too, because I know how hard it is to make friends online and I want to make the process as easy and painless as possible for everyone.

@kaia Carl Sagan, but I wonder whether Richard Feynman might have been even more enjoyable.

In Spanish, a cartoonist and architect nicknamed Peridis who made documentaries about Romanesque and Gothic churches and cathedrals.

In movies, Krzysztof Kieślowski and Takahata Isao.

@thor M2 was similar to Pascal (they were brother languages, after all). One thing that made it, IMHO, unsuitable for real-world use was that all the keywords had to be typed in uppercase. I guess it was a poor man's form of syntax highlighting.

It was very good for learning because everything in it was neatly organised and it made understanding the program and checking its correctness by hand very easy. For example, functions and procedures had a slightly different syntax. All other languages don't distinguish between them. Functions return a value while procedures are just executed for their side effects. Modula-2 would have given you a syntax error if you had used them incorrectly. Cue to modern languages where everything is a function and you don't even have to declare a return type if you don't want to.

Sad news indeed. I learned to program using Modula-2. The language itself was awful in many ways, but it was perfect for learning. I will always be grateful for his work. RIP.

Michael Engel  
Sad news – Niklaus Wirth passed away on January 1st 😢. RIP. https://twitter.com/Bertrand_Meyer/status/1742613897675178347 #oberon #modula2 #retroc...

Most people think the Y2K scare was a scam because they were sort of forced into buying new, “Y2K ready” computers when computers themselves didn't need fixing.

I personally owned a Unysys 486 from 1991 that worked fine many years after 2000, and I bet my MSX2 would have worked fine, too.

If anything, it was a software problem, but computer and software manufacturers made it everybody's problem. That was the scam and the disinfo.

Should software engineers be treated as heroes because they had to solve a problem that they created themselves? That's the real question.

Royce Williams  
The hardest part about refuting Y2K disinfo is how many problems were fixed quietly, in part to mitigate risk of ligitation (negligence, etc.). Peo...
Show older
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.