deleted by creator
deleted by creator
Counterpoint: I am too young to understand this technology, it scares me, and I am unwilling to learn.
I don’t plan on shooting anything weird, but I still don’t want anyone looking at my photos! Luckily it’s pretty trivial to develop at home, for B&W, at least.
> oh shit he dropped the “I don’t have time for this”
> quick, make a last comment so it looks like you won the internet argument!
I think doubling down signaled toxicity, rather than a light tone.
It was just a prank bro
Why? Is it so bad to care about something just because it’s made for kids? Something the editors very likely were at some point?
Or is it literally just the word “fan” in “fandom” that bothers you? Since the show is old and has been around for a long time, the wiki was probably created when the site was called wikia. Is that better?
If it’s so bad that someone made a collection of facts about a series, maybe don’t share their work.
Why are you saddened? (Other than the fact that it’s a fandom site)
Meanwhile here I am washing before and after, just because I saw it on House.
(Despite the fact that he makes a big deal about it in the first episode and in the numerous times we see him go to the bathroom following that he never once does it again. (Yes. I checked.))
Has it? The Quran didn’t survive this long by mere chance. A group of people deemed it valuable and have ensured its continued existence. Same goes for Twilight. As long as there’s a fanbase, it survives.
The “Human Error” was letting that aquaphiliac board the ship in the first place.
(i don’t actually hate the guy that much i just nedd to fit in)
They host their own marketplace. It doesn’t have everything, but it’s trivial to install any extension from a .vsix file. Unless you use 50 and need to update them…
Lately I’d say I end up not posting the majority of my comments.
Basically off topic but… At one point I tried generating some mouse ASCII art with Ch*tG*T and
, ,
(\,;,/)
(o o)
==\_~_/_==
/ \
\ /
`"`"`
and I really liked it
, ,
(\,-,/)
(o o)
===\_/===
/ o
/ mm\
(_\ /
`"`"
And now I just want to know where it stole the original from, so I could give credit when I use it…
–embed-metadata
Embed metadata to the video file. Also embeds chapters/infojson if present unless --no-embed-chapters/–no-embed-info-json are used (Alias: --add-metadata)
from the yt-dlp github page
Gonna be honest, I don’t think I ever read that. I think I usually just do git status
immediately after to see if all’s well.
Still the default in git.
The default for git repositories is still master. Not to be the “real programmers only use CLI” guy, but I feel like git init
isn’t too hipster.
Not OP but…
The wiki is a vast resource on every little detail that’s being mapped. I find it a bit difficult to browse sometimes, easier to get to some pages via DDG, but this may just be me. The Beginner’s guide page I imagine might be a decent starting point.
Though I can’t say I myself started there… IMO the easiest way is to just get StreetComplete from F-Droid (or Google Play…), and wing it. That app is extremely user friendly, and literally just asks you a simple question about something in front of you, and as such allows you to fill in or verify some of the details on the map. It’s capable of a lot, but not quite everything, such as adding in new “ways” (roads, structures, anything not a single node).
When you’re not sure about something it’s asking, that’s when “winging it” should be replaced by “wikiing it”. Or looking it up any other way, since there are now decades of confused people asking questions online for your benefit!
Vespucci is the mobile app people tend to use for heavy duty editing, or just to do the stuff SC can’t. This one has a much scarier UI. It takes some getting used to and figuring out, but really isn’t so bad once you know how the app and OSM itself works. You can download it early on, but maybe just to appreciate how easy SC is, at first!
To answer your question about discussions: each “changeset” (SC manages these for you automatically, groups similar quests into the same changeset) can be commented on by any user if they noticed some issue in your edits, or want to ask for clarification. You can go to openstreetmap.org and click “History” up top to see recent changesets that affected the area within your screen. You’ll see that most won’t have a single comment, but if you’re logged in, you can see the option to start a discussion on any of them.