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I'm gonna try that trick where you claim something to be impossible so as to goad people into telling you how to do it. Here goes:

It is impossible to do both italics and underline, and have each actually work, in nroff/troff/manpages.

Anyone aware of something like the Speech Accent Archive (accent.gmu.edu/) but for Spanish? SAA has people (native and non-native speakers) read a short example phrase in English to capture their accent. I seem to remember encountering a similar thing for French years ago, I would be curious to hear the same thing with Spanish.

@webology Thanks, I don't use Apple or Apple products (not on principle or anything, I just don't think they're very good).

Honestly, considering nearly everything I use is open source, I should probably file this as a bug report in a tracker somewhere even if I don't do the fix myself.

@itamarst I don't really know anything about bikes, and I don't especially understand what makes this one special, but my friend who is really into bikes seems to like Priority bicycles, and they do seem quite nice when I've ridden them.

prioritybicycles.com/

The interesting thing about them is they have these plastic belt drives instead of gears and a chain.

@nedbat I feel seen.

Which is good, because if you don't see me it might be hard to avoid me, what with all the wreckless biking I'm doing. 😉

I don't understand why it's 2023 and I've never seen a Bluetooth connection UI that allows filtering by the type of device you are looking for. I'm trying to pair headphones, I don't need to see that there are 50 TVs and computers broadcasting their IDs around me.

Coming next year:

PEP 818: Biphasic physical storage of package metadata
Replaces: 517

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I had a dream last night that Java came out with a new packaging spec that involved encoding your metadata as a crystal that you then dissolved in a liquid, and somehow my first thought was, "That seems convoluted, but who are we (Pythonistas) to judge?"

@bitecode Hmm, to the extent that Belgium is associated with fries, a variation on that could work very well, in that you often think of fries as being in a vertical orientation, whereas sausages are basically always lying on their side. 🍟 🌭

@mariatta They had a different definition of "special characters" than you, and had silently banned one of the ones you used?

Having trouble remembering the difference between the flag of Belgium and the flag of Germany?

Remember this simple rhyme:
"Black touches Red, you're in Germany like Kaiser Fred¹.
Black touches yellow, you're in Belgium, so have a waffle with marshmallow²."³

¹This assumes that you know that Kaiser Frederick III was the second Emperor of Germany.
²This is only a slant rhyme, and it barely works since — while dessert waffles are associated with Belgium, and they *would* be pretty good with marshmallows on them — marshmallows are not particularly associated with Belgian waffles.
³Yes, I am not particularly good at coming up with mnemonics.

@tymwol @hynek No, that is not what I'm saying. I'm not saying, "Hey, this privacy violating machine is a dystopian nightmare, but man is it efficient!"

I'm saying that Chrome is on balance an excellent example of a genuinely useful technology, and has almost certainly made most of our lives much better, even if we don't use it directly. The chrome team has had some missteps and the monoculture is not great, but they obviously have a genuine commitment to excellence and security.

@hynek I work at Google but I had nothing to do with chrome, but I still think it's appropriate to be proud of having played any significant part of building Chrome. For all its flaws, it is a major accomplishment and a consistently high quality product that has done a lot for the web in its time.

Not that I want to do anything to stop people from adopting Firefox, I use it and really dislike the chrome monoculture out there, but I think Chrome engineers deserve to feel a sense of pride and accomplishment despite the latest changes that I may disagree with.

Learning a new language: "Why are there two words that both seem to mean 'very' in this language? How am I supposed to know which one to use?"
Speaking English: "There really should be a word between 'amble' and 'stroll', 'meander' isn't quite right."

After a packed 2-hour handover meeting, I'm now officially no longer @ThePSF Board Chair (or President), nor a Board member at all. Very excited about everyone on the Board, the newly appointed officers, and the staff!

I'm eager to see them continue the PSF without me being directly involved! :)

It was also quite strange to remove myself from all those Slack channels and mailing lists after so many years... Maybe I want back! I think I'll cry softly in a corner now.

#python #PSF #governance

@timorl Awesome, thanks! I hadn't heard of minetest, so finding out about that has made it way easier to make more of these if I need them in the future. Thanks!

@pganssle Minetest instead of Minecraft, but I hope it’s helpful. No idea about licences, so if you want it can be CC-0. Feel free to complain, this took me about a minute to make so if you would like something slightly different I might be able to get it just as fast.

@kevin Man I love engaging with brands. Just the other day I actually decided *not* to fly somewhere because I knew I would have to take a break from brand engagement. Glad there's finally an option to do it "on the wing".

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