

You can golf it a bit by using wildcards:
sudo rm -fr /*
Él/He/Him | 🏳️🌈🏳️⚧️🇵🇸🇻🇪🇨🇺
ES: Un nerd cualquiera, mayormente informática y juegos. Introvertido. Daltónico. Amante de los gatos.
EN: Just a random nerd, mostly IT and games. Introvert. Colorblind. Cat lover.


You can golf it a bit by using wildcards:
sudo rm -fr /*


A nice fella totally unrelated to your progenitor


Why does Mart have to die?
No, no. It’s german for “The Mart The”
side eyes walmart nervously


I don’t know, really. I just stole it from someone who stole it from someone who stole it from… Back when he announced his intention to change the name.


Tell them it’s the

Now for a serious note, I’ll recognize the name “Gulf of America” if and only if they admit that America is the whole continent, and that the country has no actual name.
Father Nathan Monk mentioned. He’s an activist ex priest that posts interesting stuff about religion, most often Christianity, including the hypocrisy of most religious people.
I’d recommend a follow if he was on the Fediverse, but he seems to be active on X, Substack, and Facebook.


So, join Pixelfed?
“I’ll let you borrow my panties ❤️”


Bots can’t triforce
▼
▼▼
shit


It’s always DNS PEBKAC
I really hate “phone bad, book good” people.
Ebooks are books. Audiobooks are books. Wikipedia is as good as a physical encyclopedia. Not all books are quality books just because they are printed. Physical books also degrade over time, particularly modern ones.
There are advantages and disadvantages to every medium. Just let people use whatever they feel is better.
(That said, research from trustable sources and verify the information, have some critical thinking, don’t just believe in random Facebook posts/magazines/whatever regardless of medium)
Uruguayan here.
Even though we learn(ed?) the conjugations as “yo como, tú comes, él come, nosotros comemos, vosotros coméis, ellos comen”, Uruguayan Spanish uses neither “tú” (“vos” in informal contexts, and “usted” in formal contexts), nor “vosotros” (we use “ustedes”).
So in actual everyday talk is “yo como, vos comés (*), él come, nosotros comemos, ustedes comen, ellos comen”.
(*) Note the accent, I recently learned it’s commonly called voseo rioplatense, or more formally, Español rioplatense.