Limitless_screaming
In their repo, under "Limine's Design Philosophy" -> "Why not support filesystem X or feature Y? (eg: LUKS, LVM)":
The idea with Limine is to remove the responsibility of parsing filesystems and formats, aside from the bare minimum necessities (eg: FAT*, ISO9660), from the bootloader itself. It is a needless duplication of efforts to have bootloaders support all possible filesystems and formats, and it leads to massive, bloated bootloaders as a result (eg: GRUB2). What is needed is to simply make sure the bootloader is capable of reading its own files, configuration, and be able to load kernel/module files from disk. The kernel should be responsible for parsing everything else as it sees fit.
Lets hope this cut in funding decreases terrorist attacks by the SDF to balance this out.
Watch this happen, as in: they wouldn't have "managed" Gaza themselves, but helped Israel or something like the PA control it. Even if I actually claimed that, you are telling me you didn't know the US was helping Israel when Biden was in office?
9..10..11..12 We cannot restock these shelves!
NP. It's really interesting beyond it's similarities to Arabic too; the dots in Syriac are used to make letters hard or soft, which makes a lot more sense than using the same rasm with a different number of dots to make a completely different sound.
The language also often explains the little weird differences between levantine Arabic and MSA or other dialects, like the word "طاقة" which refers to small round windows and "بوبو" which is used to refer to an infant.
The equivalent to Arabic ط is "tet": ܛ, but in some fonts of Syriac "taw" ܬ looks like a mirrored ܛ.
You can read some words or full sentences sometimes, but some letters like taw (taa') ت ܬ, 'ayn ع ܥ, het (haa') ح ܚ, and shin (sheen) ش ܫ are impossible to guess without checking out the alphabet first. The madnhaya script is closer to Arabic than the Estrangela script (which you're probably seeing on your device).
Instead of the Arabic way of distinguishing similar letters by using dots, Syriac adds fangs or lines to change the "rasm" of the letter except for dal and raa' which use a dot below and one above, respectively. I used to confuse waw ܘ, qaf ܩ, and mim ܡ a lot at first.
Arabic, English, some German, and can read / write Syriac Aramaic (Mostly use it to write Garshuni).
Or even better, just after they close the bathroom door.