Hey Google, could you not dictate what I'm allowed to install on my own damn device for my "safety"? I don't need a third parent, and if I had to pick one it wouldn't be you.
@lemmy.zip
Hey Google, could you not dictate what I'm allowed to install on my own damn device for my "safety"? I don't need a third parent, and if I had to pick one it wouldn't be you.
It's the royal "we"
Better than a mediocre ape
Sure am glad we have police robots in the sky to protect us from 19 year old kids stealing stuff from Walmart
It was replaced by /rust/linuxdadjokes
Look how they massacred my boy
Sometimes the supports themselves just look so cool
Not to worry, it's on their roadmap
You telling me a home made this soup?
So many hilarious details in this
When these went viral in 2022 I read the research paper and found out that not only do they form a non-repeating pattern, but that non-repeating pattern relies on the occasional tile being reversed. That inspired me to 3D print a bunch of these that were a different color on each side and try assembling them. It's very interesting, because you have a lot of options for how to put them together, but occasionally you'll hit a point where the pattern itself forces you to put one in upside down, even though it's non-repeating. Also, it's possible to put it together "wrong" where at one edge you can't add any more tiles in either orientation and have to disassemble part of it to continue. Very interesting to mess with.
That sounds like it's going to get real messy real fast
Pretty sure that's intended to be read as the perspective of the owner class, not the commenter's own perspective.
A good thing about proxying is that it prevents auto-loading of resources from potentially malicious domains. For instance, I could make an image comment containing an image link to a server I control. When you reply to my comment, since you clearly have seen my comment, I can now look at my server logs and see the IP addresses of everyone who viewed my image. I now know that your IP address is in that list.
Just chiming in to represent the small minority of people who strongly dislike spiders in our houses
where funny
Pretty certain this is not a real ad from the '70s. Reddy Kilowatt was a mascot created to promote electric power in the 1920s. Different versions of this image have been circulating on the internet for several years.
Saw it on a hike through social media, maybe
The Higgs Bacon
thanks for using Leebra!
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