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wondering how my dialect ranks on the funny german ranking. schwyzerdütsch gotta be S tier tough.
<p><span class="h-card" translate="no"><a href="https://mastodon.social/@gamingonlinux" class="u-url mention">@<span>gamingonlinux</span></a></span> Doesn&#39;t the Linux Market Share graph look more like exponential than linear? It seems the current-most values are increasing faster than the oldest ones... Or is it just me?</p>
<p><span class="h-card" translate="no"><a href="https://infosec.exchange/@0xabad1dea" class="u-url mention">@<span>0xabad1dea</span></a></span> I didn&#39;t even begin get into all the fun corner cases and subtle exceptions you may hit!</p>
The entry should be one word: "Don't."
<p><span class="h-card" translate="no"><a href="https://social.treehouse.systems/@marcan" class="u-url mention">@<span>marcan</span></a></span> I once did it and then had to fix my printf implementation three times</p>
@mametsuko@mk.absturztau.be dutch is funny german so somehow i could understand what you wrote :cat_blush:
@cell@pl.ebin.zone Yes, changes absolutely everywhere. The most striking one (to my eye) is that Detroit has actually substantially recovered from the all-time low it suffered around 2010 and is now unironically one of the better areas in the country to be (if you told someone in 2010 that walking the streets of downtown Detroit would be safer than walking the streets in downtown San Francisco, he probably would have given you a funny look and written you off as a complete lunatic, but that's just the reality we live in now)
https://en.wikivoyage.org/wiki/United_States_without_a_car
I mean it is Maine, what could possibly be wrong with it?