dreugeworst 7 days ago • 80%
are you seriously blaming conservatives for something that the progressives of the time championed?
dreugeworst 2 weeks ago • 100%
I think or rather hope he confused vacation days with bank holidays.
dreugeworst 3 weeks ago • 100%
looks like normal variation in a persons lettering to me. compare the k in textbook with the k in skibidi, almost the same. distances between letters and especially risers as well are similar between the two sections.
dreugeworst 3 weeks ago • 100%
amazing comment, thanks!
dreugeworst 3 weeks ago • 100%
he did mention isolationist, so... we'd also have to consider how the eastern front would have evolved without lend-lease. not a historian so perhaps consensus is the Nazis still wouldn't have had a chance, but still
dreugeworst 4 weeks ago • 90%
prussia hasnt existed for over 150 years though
dreugeworst 1 month ago • 100%
clueless dev who very rarely touches web apps here, what things would break if you dont touch other records besides those for tour website?
dreugeworst 2 months ago • 100%
I'm out of the loop, who's the one on the left?
dreugeworst 2 months ago • 100%
should I start singing the wilhelmus now?
dreugeworst 2 months ago • 100%
nato doctrine doesnt rely nearly as much on artillery since they (believe they) have the capabilities to establish air superiority. most likely, air power would replace a lot of what ukraine and russia do with artillery, at greater cost but with more precision
dreugeworst 2 months ago • 100%
apart from solar and batteries, they also seem to be doing quite well on wind and train infrastructure
dreugeworst 3 months ago • 100%
ze hebben gewoon gelijk. In Spanje kan je voor 39 euro per maand een abonnement krijgen voor 1 gigabit glasvezel plus een simkaart met onbeperkt bellen en 50GB data. En ze hun eigen glasvezelnetwerk hebben waar je woont gaat er nog 10 euro van af. nederlandse prijzen zijn gewoon afzetterij
dreugeworst 3 months ago • 100%
my only criticism is that it isn't old-fashioned enough. if we're reaching back to old names, why not go all the way and pick a name like Ælfgifu
dreugeworst 3 months ago • 100%
isnt the comment about the US true of pretty much any issue?
Compared to Europe, the US response toward <your_issue_here> has been more laissez-faire.
dreugeworst 3 months ago • 100%
surely this distribution should have some skew?
dreugeworst 3 months ago • 90%
true, but try making a half decent PC for the price of one console
dreugeworst 4 months ago • 85%
it's far too fast for residential areas, even for access roads they should probably be restricted to 30mph until you get out of the residential area. The main problem is of course the high speeds are dangerous, discouraging mixed use of roads in residential areas. it's one of the reasons americans in suburbs can't imagine walking somewhere, along with zoning law issues of course.
it's really part of a couple of interconnected issues with american suburb design (in my opinion as a non-american who has only visited some suburbs in the us)
dreugeworst 4 months ago • 100%
what is crazy is 45mph stroads in the suburbs
dreugeworst 4 months ago • 100%
By the same logic felons should be allowed to vote. Instead you got the war on drugs
dreugeworst 4 months ago • 100%
can they be reused? sent back to factory, filled with me missiles?
dreugeworst 4 months ago • 100%
wtf is that real? how on earth is 5k comparable to 4 years in prison?
dreugeworst 4 months ago • 100%
my CK3 playing brain went straight to "that's a lot of murders to get the right one on the throne"
dreugeworst 4 months ago • 100%
my problem is that from any node there are two possible lines to an edgezand I'm never sure which is the correct one
dreugeworst 4 months ago • 100%
it's a bit hard to tell. of the buildings still standing and in use, the cathedral comes to mind, with was consecrated in 1238, but it stands on the site of the old mosque. this was torn down apparently in 1262, at which point construction on the cathedral began, but it would take centuries to finish everything.
there is another church that was named a parish in 1245 and so was probably already standing then, so perhaps that building is the oldest? I don't knoe how much of that original building is still standing though
dreugeworst 4 months ago • 100%
yeah I didn't really understand that part tbh. if they can connect the array using flat pads, why not make that the connection for the memoryb instead of the fragile pins? why the extra component?
dreugeworst 5 months ago • 100%
dreugeworst 5 months ago • 100%
I mean, this is also a particularly amateurish implementation. In more sophisticated versions you'd process the user input and check if it is doing something you don't want them to using a second AI model, and similarly check the AI output with a third model.
This requires you to make / fine tune some models for your purposes however. I suspect this is beyond Gab AI's skills, otherwise they'd have done some alignment on the gpt model rather than only having a system prompt for the model to ignore
dreugeworst 5 months ago • 100%
Am Dutch, can confirm
dreugeworst 5 months ago • 87%
So you don't have to modify the amount when the recipe called for kosher salt but you only have sea salt. A cup of pasta? Depending on the type you end up with vastly different weight
dreugeworst 5 months ago • 75%
Some words on my screen will be about as meaningful as a Harry Potter book at best.
Lol, why would I try to convince you when you already stated you can't be convinced
dreugeworst 5 months ago • 100%
But it does affect the downward force acting on the object. Given two objects of the same shape but with different masses, one will indeed fall slower than the other. This is because the ratio of weight to surface area differs a lot between the two. Here's a calculator from NASA you can play with, and a relevant passage from the same page:
If we have two objects with the same area and drag coefficient, like two identically sized spheres, the lighter object falls slower. This seems to contradict the findings of Galileo that all free-falling objects fall at the same rate with equal air resistance. But Galileo’s principle only applies in a vacuum, where there is NO air resistance and drag is equal to zero.
https://www1.grc.nasa.gov/beginners-guide-to-aeronautics/termvel/
dreugeworst 6 months ago • 66%
Trump might implode the current system, but a functional democracy won't replace it. It would become a one party system in the style of Russia, trump has been clear enough about that.
dreugeworst 6 months ago • 100%
It's one thing to just use the software, it's another to open bug tickets that you expect the maintainer to prioritise. It's free software, the maintainer doesn't have to do anything for you. If they want tickets fixed with high priority, they should work something out with the maintainer.
dreugeworst 6 months ago • 100%
I get that it's not the main point of the article, but is she seriously considering that someone's meal choices are good indicators of whether they'd make a good babysitter?
dreugeworst 6 months ago • 100%
While losing this war would not be an existential threat to Russia as a whole, it might very well be to Putin though
dreugeworst 6 months ago • 100%
The hands of the guy on the left holding a phone up merge together. I'd say it's definitely ai
dreugeworst 6 months ago • 100%
If you used setPriority, does that mean all subsequent messages have the same priority? Or is this a dsl that implicitly takes the message as the second parameter?
dreugeworst 7 months ago • 100%
Omg they even got reel big fish in there
dreugeworst 8 months ago • 84%
HE TELLS ME EVERY DAY
dreugeworst 8 months ago • 100%
Wow, you just completely ignored what he said, and quoted the same short sentence you quoted before as if it settles the issue.
I hope you're trolling, in which case: A+ effort, well done
Note: I'm not the author This post is in part a response to an aspect of Nate’s post “Does Wayland really break everything?“, but also my reflection on discussing Wayland protocol additions, a unique pleasure that I have been involved with for the past months1.