uwu owo etc., you know…
o1g
I mean, most people doesn’t even question how a dude walked on water, either.
And Bonzi even was a 3rd party thing. Now imagine that shit, just built into the system by that time. 😅
Heck, even MSN Browser was a thing and I’m pretty sure just because it said “Good afternoon” or some shit when you launched it.
Since at that time these shits weren’t really normalized, I can imagine some people would actually like these things and maybe even use them. It would have feel… kinda modern? If that makes sense… (tho when I first saw XP after using 95 and 98 in my life at that point, it felt absolutely super-duper modern x3)
I like this image - it is really nicely done. I don’t like what it represents, but the image itself is decent.
dedicated “little brother” controller
Yeah, though I was like this is some behind the scenes or dvd extras material for this thread :P
okay, so this means the word ‘home’ is actually special accross languages 😆.
and not neccessairly the home as homeland like haza in hungarian ('cause that’s not even a noun (tho it is somewhat equivalent with home)), home like… your home.
In Hungarian it’s the same with “home” in particular. You say “I’m home.”. In Hungarian, I too say the exact same thing: “Otthon vagyok” (I’m home).
Your other two example works the same, you won’t say in Hungarian “I’m school” (Iskola vagyok (it means I am literally a school)). But you say “IskoláBAN vagyok” (I’m at school) or “PostÁN vagyok” (I’m at the post office. Notice the suffix in this case is completely different, but that’s another story of Hungarian)
Just to give you some opposite example, WordPress, Magento, Drupal, Django are using salts almost 2 decades now.
parisian gang rise
still hasn’t got any taste
I Looked up doing factorials and n! = n(n – 1) is used interchangeably with n! = n*(n – 1)
yeah, the way I have been taught is that either you put the multiplication sign there or not, it’s the exact same, there’s absolutely no difference in n(n-1) and n*(n-1). in the end, you treat it like the * sign is there and it’s just matter of convenience you can leave it off.
isn’t that division sign I only saw Americans use written like this (÷) means it’s a fraction? so it’s 6÷2, since the divisor (or what is it called in english, the bottom half of the fraction) isn’t in parenthesis, so it would be foolish to put the whole 2(1+2) down there, there’s no reason for that.
so it’s (6/2)*(1+2) which is 3*3 = 9.
the other way around would be 6÷(2(1+2)) if the whole expression is in the divisor and than that’s 1.
tho I’m not really proficient in math, I have eventually failed it in university, but if I remember my teachers correctly, this should be the way. but again, where I live, we never use the ÷ sign, only in elementary school where we divide on paper. instead we use the fraction form, and with that, these kind of seemingly ambiguous expressions doesn’t exist.
The calendar contains them. Each day has some names written inside them.
(also, I edited my post, it’s by our first name, not last 😅)
How many of you can relate
None. I mean, it’s nice if we have ‘National literature day’ and ‘National Earth’s day’ and such, but more minor holidays I just can’t care less.
Where I live people have a “name day”, accordingly to their last name first name. (each day has one or few names associated to them; sometimes one name has multiple days for god know why…).
Now, the existence of this is purely to have a reason for people to get drunk (and mad if you forget it), which isn’t my piece of cake anyways and because of this, I really don’t care about name days in general.
And also, my birthday and name day are next to each other so I never really had either a pure birthday or pure name day, usually they got combined. Even with christmas as well… (there’s a few weeks between them).
edit: first name, not last. (it’s also called difderently here)
I had a really important role of my Pi 1 B+ for a long time; it was a network storage for my PlayStation 2 to play ISOs from the network with Free McBoot and Open PS2 Loader.
grabbed a big HDD, and old CD drive case and put everything inside. The Pi could be powered from the PS2s USB, hooked up a short network cable and it was ready to go.
Tho I still have that PS2, it’s not in use anymore, so neither the Pi.
nice