U+1F914 🤔
I ❤️🔥 Firefox
- 12 Posts
- 12 Comments
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
[Dormant] moved to !historymemes@piefed.social@lemmy.world•lex lutherEnglish
6·5 months agoAnd in the process fucked up how Germans say numbers for centuries.
Sounds interesting. Do you know where I can read more about that?
When I try searching for Luthers influence on numbers, I just get data about Luther (year of birth, age at death, etc.).
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•which distro and why do you prefer it over others?
5·2 years agoOpenSuse Slowroll (rolling release with constant updates plus an update burst every two months)
- Prefer rolling release over fixed release.
- I do like OpenSuse in general.
- I install a lot of packages and want to stay up to date (security & GUI notifications). With OpenSuse Tumbleweed I have to install a couple gigabytes of updates every week. It’s not ideal for me.
- Too impatient to wait for the proper release of Slowroll.
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What irritates you the most with your own language?English
36·2 years agoHow numbers are pronounced.
In German the number 185 is pronounced as “hundred-five-and-eighty” (hundertfünfundachtzig), the digits are not spoken in order of their magnitude.
Not terrible, not great.
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldOPto
Rust@programming.dev•Small Ferris on c/canvas@toast.oooEnglish
2·2 years agoA big thank you to @Aloso@programming.dev , @olicvb@lemmy.world and everyone I missed for contributing their pixels. 🦀
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Does Mnemonic Passcode more secure than normal password?English
1·2 years agodeleted by creator
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Does Mnemonic Passcode more secure than normal password?English
5·2 years agoThe security of a fully random password depends on the number of available symbols (alphabet) and the length.
The strength of the password is simplysymbolcount^length.For a conventional password the symbols/alphabet are characters, numbers and special characters.
For a mnemonic the symbols are simply full words and the “alphabet” is a list with a couple thousand words.Mnemonic passwords are secure because of their large alphabet, and easy to remember because of the lower length (in symbols) and because human brains are good at coming up with associations (usually stories) for random words.
If you want to generate your own mnemonic password you can try diceware.
With diceware you roll a few dice to select random words from a list.
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
Rust@programming.dev•Experimenting with Iced - Simple but inefficient?English
2·2 years ago
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
Lemmy.World Announcements@lemmy.world•Lemmy.world updated to 0.18.1
187·3 years ago“This release includes major improvements to performance, specifically optimizations of database queries. Special thanks to @phiresky, @ruud, @sunaurus and many others for investigating these.”
Hehe, lemmy.world doing some stress testing for the entire lemmy project.
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
Programming@programming.dev•Should we clone reddit posts?English
7·3 years agoSeems like the subscript markdown doesn’t work on Jerboa yet.
Apologies to anyone bothered by the tildes. 🙇
U+1F914 🤔@lemmy.worldto
Programming@programming.dev•Should we clone reddit posts?English
11·3 years agoThere is value in real people selecting what to post on a link aggregator like lemmy/reddit/… .
I don’t want to loose that human feeling, both in posts and comments.
Of course the voting mechanism can do a lot of the heavy lifting, but having a flood of robot posts with a score of one might have a negative effect on good posts getting discovered.Hopefully the community will grow naturally to a point where it can satisfy my doom-scrolling addiction.
Captchas depended on websockets which were removed.
https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/3200#issuecomment-1600505757
“Note that captcha uuids and answers were stored in-memory in the websocket server which is removed now, so its necessary to add a new database table for captchas.”










More info in this article on linuxiac