Don't forget the --no-preserve-root
either. If you leave the roots intact, the French will just grow right back
the difference between community <-> user are less than youd think. the hurdles are nearly identical
As a matter of fact, if you look up a Lemmy community (or *bin magazine) on i.e. Mastodon, you'll see it's literally just a user that boosts all posts/comments posted to it
I don't ActivityPub has any concept of communities, since even microblog-focused groups (like Guppe) work that way
Edit: not really, see replies
It looks like the bricks on the top front of the building and the sign are photoshopped in
If you zoom in, those bricks are much bigger than the bricks around the garage doors and on the side, and the transition is rounded and happens in the middle of bricks. Whoever made this must not have masked out the pole (assume that's also legit) because the brick texture and the bottom of the sign go over it
First line even before the main article
Summarized: Key Takeaways
- The Sargasso Sea is the breeding ground for all freshwater eels, where they travel thousands of miles to spawn and then die.
I mean in fairness to the first one, on most systems it is possible to turn wifi back on without turning off airplane mode (there is in-flight wifi after all)
There's also the term ritardando in music for gradually slowing down, but at least that's typically abbreviated to "rit."
If you actually read it, the emojis are just a silly little C2 frontend, the actual attack vector has nothing to do with Discord
The part at 12:10 about how Goose named the characters was surprising. Pomni's name being Russian for "remember" seemed too perfect to me, especially after finally getting around to watching Murder Drones and meeting Doll. I figured there was someone at Glitch who had at least some influence on writing and liked Russian, and they just opted for a more subtle hint this time. But nope, total coincidence! That's what I get for feeling smart i guess lol 🙃
"I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work."
- Thomas Edison, Nuclear Physicist