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kbin.life

slazer2au , to showerthoughts in In a few decades, electric toothbrushes will be so common that children won't know how to brush their teeth "manually"

Seeing as electric brushes have already been around for decades I doubt it will happen.

Bizarroland ,
@Bizarroland@kbin.social avatar

I want like a USB c powered whole mouth toothbrush that looks like two u-shaped chainsaws full of tooth bristles that just wiggle back and forth very quickly and spray toothpaste and mouthwash as they go.

Where is that innovation?

200ok ,

Like a car wash for teeth

TheQuietCroc ,

I’ve something like that but it requires brushing one half of your mouth at a time.

dalekcaan ,

Also because electric brushes don’t brush for you. You still use them the same way as a regular toothbrush, they just clean better.

WhatAmLemmy ,

Wait… Are you people doing a “brushing” action back and forth with your electric toothbrushes?

I just move it across each surface once in a slow kinda up and down zig zag — the way you would use an electric buffer or power washer to clean a long narrow surface with multiple sides… Upper set of teeth first; front, left side of mouth to right side of mouth. Repeat for top and back surfaces of teeth. Then repeat it all again for lower set of teeth.

I guess the front of teeth could be combined into one surface, but I’m a raging psychopath.

200ok ,

This is the proper technique. It doesn’t cause as much erosion of gums and enamel.

captainlezbian , to asklemmy in Why in Sci-Fi they always use Marine or Naval terminology and structure instead of Aviation for the spaceship structure, navigation and military ranks?

Because people don’t live in an airplane together for long periods of time. Pilots in sci fi are often aviation themed, but captains are naval because spaceships beyond our current level are closer to battleships, cruise ships, or aircraft carriers than fighter jets or passenger liners.

chalupapocalypse , to technology in Are search engines, like Google, relevant at all anymore? Why use them? A relevant debate. It's not 2010 anymore.

I’ve heard kids these days search tiktok instead of Google.

Kids are fucking stupid

ramirezmike ,

I was driving my brother in law and he was trying to tell me some news he heard but couldn’t get the specifics so he spent ten minutes searching tiktok for it. I couldn’t believe it

essteeyou ,

I’ve heard that’s true for restaurants and stuff like that, such seemed pretty baffling to me considering Google Maps (and others) exists.

Appoxo ,
@Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I mean there are cool channels that showcase the food instead of ratings. You can’t fake the restaurant AND their food so quickly
Example (Also available on YT): www.tiktok.com/
The only thing it would need to be a true superpower is to limit an area and then show all restaurants displaying their food.
BUT: This will quickly by gamed as well as nothijg would stop the owner of just creating instagramable dishes that taste just meh but paying the creator to say otherwise.

tyler , to mildlyinfuriating in My daughter lost her social studies essay because LibreOffice doesn't have autosave on automatically.

This thread is absolutely terrible. I’m very sorry op. As a software dev, I think I’ve hit the save button maybe ten times in the past 2 years. You are right that it should auto save by default. That’s just required in this day and age. People saying they don’t want auto save because they don’t want cats losing their work literally do not understand how auto save works in the vast majority of modern systems. A simple example is Google sheets, where you can literally see every change made to every character in every file throughout time. You’re not going to lose anything. Software devs solved this in their own tools literally decades ago. My job is literally editing text files all day long. I can’t remember the last time I lost data due to a crash or a cat or anything.

Some people even mention LaTeX which literally has a solution with Overleaf. If software doesn’t autosave in this day and age, it’s shit software.

What you have here is another case of Linux users jumping to defend the only things they have to defend, even if it’s absolute shit.

FlyingSquid OP ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Thank you.

fhqwgads ,

Thank you! My God, the amount of holier-than-thou “it’s your own fault” in this thread is mildly infuriating in and of itself. Auto save and versioning have been a thing in Word for at least 8 years, probably over a decade but that’s the first version mentioned in their docs, and I struggle to think much software I use regularly that doesn’t have some form of it. Hell, even the new Notepad on Windows keeps your changes when it’s accidentally closed.

I like most open source software but this sort of attitude in the community and what seems like an absolute disdain for any UX concept from the past 20 years makes me very hesitant to recommend it almost anyone outside very specific technical circles.

guacupado ,

I mean, it is? I don’t even use LibreOffice, but god I’m thinking of my help desk days and dealing with people getting angry at everything except themselves.

fhqwgads ,

If people make a mistake occasionally or are willfully ignorant that’s a user issue. If almost everyone in this thread is talking about how you should push a button every 5 seconds on a machine designed to automate tasks maybe that’s a design issue.

intensely_human ,

If it were every 5 seconds, that would make sense for a cron job. If it’s “every time you’ve achieved a sense of satisfaction with the writing” then having the human do it makes sense because it’s an even based trigger and the computer can’t see the event.

pirrrrrrrr ,

People make mistakes, that’s why we automate things. If a system relies on a human not making mistakes it is doomed to fail eventually.

Saving manually should be a feature, but autoaave should be on by default these days, unless 30+ years of people losing work due to not hitting “save” manually has taught us nothing.

Crashes happen. Errors happen. Pets and children happen. Any major document editor should be able to auto save and replay a very long history of actions.

Improve the system, because you can’t improve people with a code patch.

intensely_human ,

unless 30+ years of people losing work due to not hitting “save” manually has taught us nothing.

It has taught us to take responsibility for saving our work

intensely_human ,

Improve the system, because you can’t improve people with a code patch.

But a person can improve themselves before they can improve the software they work on. There’s less collaboration and centralized planning required for an individual solution to this problem.

ObsidianZed ,

Man, maybe I just grew up in a different time and/or environment but I still to this day manually save obsessively. I use VSCode most days and feel like I’m constantly hitting the save hotkey. With that said though, I am just not a fan of most autosaves. I like to know what the current contents are and whether or not I have unsaved changes.

That’s just me though.

ShadowCatEXE ,
@ShadowCatEXE@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, I don’t trust the auto save to save my work properly. I work as a Software Engineer, and any small change I make, even if I’m not done with the change and I’m just thinking, my hands immediately default to CTRL+S.

Always always make sure your work is being saved if it means something to you. Especially since windows will force update and reboot your computer. Battery’s can die, power can go out and your computer shuts down. Applications can and will crash.

SkippingRelax ,

Why do you trust ctrl-s though? You are a software engineer, you know that a bug in the piece of code that saves the document would affect both calls, regardless of whether its invoked by a timer or by the end user pressing keys, right?

I mean we have all been bitten by op’s problem In the past but it was exactly the same issue, autosave not enabled (most likely didn’t exist) what’s with all these, I don’t trust software to do it’s job so I do things by hand?

Particularly from software developers or other technical users. Found a bug in a piece of software, report it, you don’t need to change your behaviour for the next 20 years and tell everyone anecdotes about you still don’t trust a regression.

intensely_human ,

ctrl-S is deeper, older code. And yes, a bug in that would affect both manual and automatic saving. Meaning the bug has greater exposure and therefore would be detected faster.

More easily detectable bugs are less of a problem, because lack of alarm indicates lack of those bugs.

It’s this: (P => Q) => (!Q => !P)

Basically P is the bug existing and Q is someone detecting it. The more powerful the implication arrow on the left side of that equation, the more powerful the implication arrow on the right side. Or if you prefer probabilities: a greater conditional probability on the left means a greater conditional probability on the right.

Worse bugs that affect more systems are less worthy of the user’s attention.

SkippingRelax ,

If current_time > x invoke deper,older code that you somehow trust

Alternatively, more modern implementation suggested by someone else in this thread

At every keystroke, invoke deeper older code that you somehow trust

While not impossible, pretty hard to slip a bug into something like that and if it happens it gets identified,reported and fixed like all bugs. Users tend to be quite vocal about data loss.

Also some software developers tend to overcomplicate things, this is not rocket science

ShadowCatEXE ,
@ShadowCatEXE@lemmy.world avatar

There’s a couple things… First, it’s a habit to be constantly pressing CTRL+S. I’ve been doing it for many years, I’ll continue to do it probably until I stop using a keyboard. It’s such an easy keystroke, since my hands are almost always hovering over the keyboard. Second, in some software you can create new documents without first creating a file on disk. This means that when I go to hit CTRL+S, it prompts me to save the file. That’s not to say that some software can’t save a recovery version of the document in the event the software crashes, but I’m not going to bet money on it working 100% of the time. I’d rather be proactive and personally make sure my work is saved. Gives me peace of mind.

SkippingRelax ,

I already covered your first point, you don’t need to.

As for your second point, autosave still does its job. The fact that you haven’t chosen a name and a folder for your document doesn’t mean that the software hasn’t created one on disk that keeps getting autosaved. When you decide to finally save the document, that file gets renamed and placed where you want it.

I mean this is trivial stuff that got solved a long time ago, I don’t see people on this thread saying I don’t trust electronic payments, I only write checks but somehow everyone think a basic feature is broken everywhere

BURN ,

Every single one of us has been bitten by auto save that didn’t work. I’ve personally lost hours worth of code to auto save glitches and poorly timed save runs. People don’t trust it because in the past it has had and/or caused problems with their workflow.

Ctrl+S is a manual confirmation that I saved it, and is a step taken before running any code, especially through a terminal in an IDE where if the auto save hasn’t kicked in will mean the changes aren’t reflected.

voluble ,

Mmm. I grew up in a different time too. Makes me ponder how the software circumstances of that time built in us a very different idea of what an iteration actually is, when it comes to writing. The fact that we couldn’t go back and atomically dissect the history of a piece. That a draft, and an edit, were something heavier. Maybe we’d have to think a bit more slowly and carefully before irreversibly casting a previous version into the ether.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not making a “gen z bad” post. Just reflecting on how things are different these days, and maybe it leads to a different kind of work.

rxin ,

Lots of VSCode extensions appear to assume manual save is on, so if you have autosave, they spam notifications like crazy. “Ooh you have syntax error in your config, please fix this now >:(((((”

Notifications were what made me abandon vscode lol

ObsidianZed ,

So out of curiosity, what did you move to and do you use autosaving? I’m always willing to try out other text editors but it’ll take something impressive to make me start autosaving.

rxin ,

deleted_by_author

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  • ObsidianZed ,

    I’ve never actually used vim, though occasionally fallback on vi for remote admin. I may finally check it out now though. Thanks!

    rainynight65 ,

    I grew up in that different time too, but I completely agree with the person you’re replying to.

    Auto save is a must. No arguments. You can have personal preferences and behaviours that make you want to disable autosaving and control your saves manually, that’s perfectly fine, but that’s you and your preference. A modern application should absolutely have autosaving enabled by default. Anything else is user unfriendly and indefensible.

    ObsidianZed ,

    Oh for what it’s worth, I probably agree more with the fact that autosave should be on by default but also possible to disable.

    But yes, I do have my preference and I admit it is just that, a preference.

    westyvw ,

    No. I disagree. I should be in control. I do things at times that I do not want saved. If you have auto save then the only way is with historical commits.

    Auto save has fucked me over too many times. Leave it off.

    The ONLY way I can see us both being satisfied is to start each document with a save location and asking save, or auto save on the first save.

    rainynight65 ,

    Nothing is stopping you from being in control. You can turn auto save off and set things up any which way you like. People have different preferences.

    And yes, an application should absolutely ask for a file name and save location on document creation - that’s just good UX. Asking for those details when the user is ostensibly about to finish working is not helpful.

    SkippingRelax ,

    What you have here is another case of Linux users jumping to defend the only things they have to defend, even if it’s absolute shit.

    Funny how OP is using libreoffice on Windows though, what’s there Linux-related to defend? Did a Linux user hurt you? If anything this is another opportunity for some snarky comment about Windows being shit and crashing for no reason since the 1990s.

    intensely_human ,

    “The year is 2024. Any car that doesn’t automatically brake when it encounters an obstacle is a shit car”

    While the above may be true, it’s definitely not a reason to say:

    “I shouldn’t have to use my brakes”

    Feathercrown , to asklemmy in What quotes from children's media went hard as hell for no reason?

    “Do you think God stays in heaven because he too fears what he has created?”

    exoplanetary ,
    @exoplanetary@lemmy.world avatar

    Came here to say this. I was super surprised when I first found out that this came from Spy Kids.

    RIP_Cheems ,
    @RIP_Cheems@lemmy.world avatar

    It’s such a good quote and yet it comes from spy kids. Not that spy kids is bad, but still.

    TheBananaKing , to nostupidquestions in Why does incest result in birth defects?

    Swiss cheese theory.

    Genes code for all the differnet protein molecules in your body; if any of them are damaged, they don’t produce that particular protein and your body is all messed up.

    This is bad. Luckily, you have two strands of DNA, one from either parent - and a copy of each gene on either strand. If the copy of the gene you need on strand A is broken, no problem, you just use the copy from strand B (or vice-versa).

    However, this relies on both strands having all their broken bits in different places.

    Think of a slice of swiss cheese - if you need 100% cheese cover on your sandwich, and you have two randomly-selected pieces of swiss cheese, all the holes are going to be in different places, and you’ll probably be fine. Maybe there’ll be a couple of tiny gaps, but you’ll probably get by.

    However, if both slices come from right next to each other n the same block, then most if not all the holes are going to line up with each other, and you are fucked.

    TacoButtPlug , to asklemmy in What quotes from children's media went hard as hell for no reason?
    @TacoButtPlug@sh.itjust.works avatar

    "I like you as you are Exactly and precisely I think you turned out nicely And I like you as you are

    I like you as you are Without a doubt or question Or even a suggestion Cause I like you as you are

    I like your disposition Your facial composition And with your kind permission I’ll shout it to a star

    I like you as you are I wouldn’t want to change you Or even rearrange you Not by far

    I like you I-L-I-K-E-Y-O-U I like you, yes I do I like you, Y-O-U I like you, like you as you are"

    • Mr. Rogers
    SpaceNoodle ,

    There was a clear reason for what this saint did.

    BaumGeist ,

    There’s so many good Mr. Rogers quotes. What a wholesome human. I’m sad I wasn’t around to witness the height of his cultural relevance, but the beauty of him and his teachings were their timelessness. May his work be immortalized.

    PBS had so many kind, gentle people working to remind us that there is love, kindness and hope in the world if we just take time to make room for it.

    TheCannonball ,

    I cried for a moment then laughed when i saw your username.

    TacoButtPlug ,
    @TacoButtPlug@sh.itjust.works avatar

    Good. ;)

    nieceandtows , to showerthoughts in It must be annoying for New York City workers to constantly have to clean spider webs off buildings in the Marvel universe.

    Annoying? Quite the opposite. Forget the self dissolving property of the web and assume it’s there forever. Now you got a material that is extremely light and extremely strong and flexible. Companies are going to pay to collect them. It’s gonna be like ambergris, but exclusive to one city. People would flock to collect Spider-Man web. I wouldn’t be surprised if Spider-Man web is outlawed by the government and becomes even more valuable.

    Kolanaki ,
    @Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

    Parker could simply quit his job as a freelance photographer and sell the formula to his own web shit, because he made them himself and aren’t part of his super powers.

    nieceandtows ,

    As a superior raimi fan, I have no idea what you’re talking about.

    Kolanaki ,
    @Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

    I firmly believe that the only reason Raimi made it that way in his movies is to have that scene of Peter learning how to use them.

    “Up, up and away web!”

    MrScottyTay ,

    SHAZAM!

    Zahille7 ,

    Fly!

    TwilightVulpine ,

    I like mechanical web shooters better but that scene was pretty funny

    TwilightVulpine ,

    This is literally the very first thing he tries to do in the comics before he becomes Spider-Man and it doesn’t work because the people he reached out for thought it was too short-lived.

    But also, needing to juggle real life responsibilities like having a job is one of the main appeals of Spider-Man as compared to, say, the Avengers.

    swab148 ,
    @swab148@startrek.website avatar

    GET ME SPIDERMAN

    -J.J.J in some universe

    Ilflish ,

    In the comics he tries to sell the compound and no one wants it iirc due to its lifespan. Stupid but at least it’s brought up

    Fixbeat , to nostupidquestions in Why doesnt the wooden handle on my pot burn?

    If you get it hot enough it will. Wood burning temps are higher than most cooking temperatures.

    HobbitFoot ,

    That’s basically it. Unless you are broiling something or putting the material directly on the flame, wood is great as a material for its insulating properties.

    PM_Your_Nudes_Please ,

    Yup, pretty much. Wood begins to char at around 450°F (~233°C) and the vast majority of cooking occurs closer to the 350-400° range. And even at 450, it still takes several hours for wood to char and eventually ignite.

    If you were cooking at like 700°, then yeah you’d have issues. But cooking at 700° would be way past the point of Maillard reactions, (the chemical reactions that cause meats to brown, crisp, and add flavor as they cook) and would go straight into char. So even when doing high-temp things like searing steak, it would be overkill because you’d just have a charred carbon crust instead of the nice brown Maillard reaction crust that steak lovers want.

    plofi ,

    I’m not disagreeing with anything you said, I’d just like to add that Maillard reactions happen with all food, not just meat.

    rikudou , to fediverse in Should instances defederate with other instances anymore if we can filter instances out on our end?

    Yes. As an admin of an instance who really doesn’t want child porn on my server, I’m gonna defederate the shit out of any instance that doesn’t take care of such content in a reasonable time. And in my opinion, loli is child porn, so defederating there as well.

    Other than that, anything that’s illegal in my jurisdiction.

    And the last category, spam and bigotry. Basically anything that puts too much work on my plate - if I get dozens of reports a day for users of a single instance (and I agree with the reports), I’ll defederate, because no one’s paying for my time.

    So these are some valid reasons for me to defederate. There are probably more.

    TeddyKila , to asklemmy in How would you feel if Beehaw left the Fediverse?

    Don’t let the door hit you on the way out.

    glibg10b , to nostupidquestions in Does anyone else feel like 90% of the population is stupid?
    BananaTrifleViolin ,

    Yeah, "stupid" is not defined around average intelligence. This whole panel is an example of a straw man fallacy to undermine someone saying "people are stupid".

    glibg10b ,

    Sure, “stupid” isn’t defined around average intelligence, but “people” is defined around the average person. So, by saying “stupid” is not defined around average intelligence, you’re really criticizing the phrase “people are stupid”…

    …which is exactly what this comic is doing

    lightnsfw ,

    Saying “people are stupid” is the same as saying “the average person is stupid”. What’s hard to understand here?

    lvxferre ,
    @lvxferre@lemmy.ml avatar

    Frankly, that is just a big pile of babble.

    but “people” is defined [SIC] around the average person

    There’s no “definition” here. The closest to what you said that would make some sense would be “but “people” implies a generalisation around the average person”, but it doesn’t work in your argument because it does not contradict what BananaTrifleViolin said. Nor it justifies your assumption that

    by saying “stupid” is not defined around average intelligence, you’re really criticizing the phrase “people are stupid”…


    I genuinely think that you did not understand what the other poster said, so I’ll repeat it under different words.

    The comic has an implicit definition of stupidity as “lower than average intelligence” (see panel 2).

    BananaTrifleViolin is highlighting that this is not the definition that people use for “stupid” when they say “people are stupid”. And that leads to a fallacy called “straw man”, where you misrepresent a position to beat it. Munroe (the cartoonist) is doing this, either by accident or on purpose. (It is not the first time he does this; his comic about free speech also shows the same irrationality.)

    Markimus ,

    That’s not how you respond to someone saying “people are stupid.”

    lvxferre ,
    @lvxferre@lemmy.ml avatar

    What you’re really saying is “other people aren’t as smart as me.

    I like xkcd but I feel like Munroe is being assumptive here, assuming “your expectations are based on you”. Are they?

    AnalogyAddict ,

    Agree. When I say “people are stupid” I mean they are living below their potential. The average person may have the intelligence, but consistently refuse to use it.

    lvxferre ,
    @lvxferre@lemmy.ml avatar

    Yeah, I think that this is part of the deal.

    When someone says “people are stupid”, they usually are not conveying “the average person has a lower-than-average intelligence”. And I don’t think that they’re even comparing people with some point of reference (the average, or themself, or someone else) - in the context they’re usually criticising some behaviour that they see as stupid, such as [in your words] “living below their potential”, or [in mine] “showing some blatant lack or reasoning”.

    calypsopub ,

    This. I don’t mind ignorance. The ignorant can always be educated. I mind WILLFUL ignorance. Those who refuse to look at facts or use reason when confronted with something that contradicts their world view. THOSE are the stupid people.

    samus12345 ,
    @samus12345@lemmy.world avatar
    GreyShuck , to asklemmy in Lemmy, what are some of your "oh shit" work stories?
    @GreyShuck@feddit.uk avatar

    An isolated shingle spit nature reserve. We’d lost mains power in a storm some while back and were running on a generator. Fuel deliveries were hard to arrange. We’d finally got one. We were pretty much running on fumes and another storm was coming in. We really needed this delivery.

    To collect the fuel, I had to take the Unimog along a dump track and across 5 miles of loose shingle - including one low causeway stretch through a lagoon that was prone to wash out during storms. We’d rebuilt it a LOT over the years. On the way up, there was plenty of water around there, but it was still solid.

    I get up to the top ok and get the tank full - 2000L of red diesel - but the wind is pretty strong by the time I have. Half way back, I drop down off the seawall and reach the causeway section. The water is just about topping over. If I don’t go immediately, I won’t get through at all and we will be out of fuel for days - maybe weeks. So I put my foot down and get through that section only to find that 200 meters on, another section already has washed out. Oh shit.

    I back up a little but sure enough the first section has also washed through now. I now have the vehicle and a full load of fuel marooned on a short section of causeway that is slowly washing out. Oh double shit. Probably more than double. Calling it in on the radio, everyone else agrees and starts preparing for a pollution incident.

    In the end I find the firmest spot that I can in that short stretch and leave the Moggie there. Picking my route and my moment carefully I can get off that ‘island’ on foot - no hope with the truck - BUT due to the layout of the lagoons only to the seaward ridge, where the waves are now crashing over into the lagoon with alarming force. I then spend one of the longest half-hours I can remember freezing cold and drenched, scrambling yard by yard along the back side of that ridge and flattening myself and hoping each time a big wave hits.

    The firm bit of causeway survived and there was no washed away Unimog or pollution in the end - and I didn’t drown either - but much more by luck than judgement.

    These days I am in a position where I am responsible for writing risk assessments and methods statements for procedures like this. It was another world back then.

    Dio9sys OP ,

    That is seriously some action movie shit

    droning_in_my_ears , to nostupidquestions in While everyone is watching the world stage and some are predicting WWIII, isn't there a good chance that the USA is getting close to some kind of civil war?

    My country is going through a civil war right now.

    The US is nowhere near close. You’ll be fine.

    LifeInMultipleChoice ,

    Where are you from?

    droning_in_my_ears ,

    Sudan

    LifeInMultipleChoice ,

    Mind me asking about your experience(s)? I am not familiar with much of Sudan

    droning_in_my_ears ,

    I’ve not lived there since I was 6. My experience is doomscrolling the news and getting really anxious about getting a new citizenship ASAP.

    I have family there and they mostly moved outside the capital where the fighting is. Some are still in the capital. It’s hard to contact them. Last I’d heard of my cousin he was eating raw flour to survive. He’s a doctor in the military trapped in a place surrounded by fighting.

    LifeInMultipleChoice ,

    Where abouts do you reside now? What do you feel they overlook when Sudan is displayed visually or verbally discussed from the media.

    Also for a pleasantry if someone said Poland was known for sausage, Germany for snitzel, U.S. for cheeseburgers, (all over generalized one off foods, not specific or defining) what would you say would be a food for Sudan?

    droning_in_my_ears ,

    I live in Qatar. Will be moving to Germany soon hopefully.

    I don’t really feel qualified to say what the media gets wrong about Sudan because like I said I didn’t grow up there and I’m not a political scientist. Sudan is not talked about much in the western media and when it is, it’s never good news. Usually because another coup or killing, and it’s more accurate than most media in the middle east. But if you want an example of western media getting something completely wrong here’s Fox News calling Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo a reformist. He’s a genocidal warlord with ties to Russian Wagner. I suspect that article is propaganda because he’s been known to hire PR firms to clean up his image.

    Ok. Enough of the depressing reality. What food are we known for? I don’t know actually. We share some of our culture and foods with our much more popular northern neighbor Egypt, but that culture is mostly attributed to them. For example we also have pyramids but not many know that. We also make Falafel, ful, mahshi etc.

    We do have many foods that only we make but it’s not known to outsiders. Usually Ramadan food: traditional stews eaten with gruels or fermented bread. There’s some traditional drinks too.

    One of those stews, is a food other Arabs know because of a funny coincidence: part of its name in our dialect means “male whore” in other dialects.

    LifeInMultipleChoice ,

    The food sounds interesting. I’d love to go visit some time. As I’ve gotten older it seems I have lost that “someday I’ll go visit said place” spontaneity/hope for adventure. Born in 1989. I think it’s time I re-find that part of myself. If I make it there I’ll be sure to tell you a out the food. A nice falafel sounds good.

    droning_in_my_ears ,

    Maybe wait a little while haha. This civil war is dragging on and we might be more than one country by the time it ends.

    tungah , to asklemmy in What is something that definitely should not exist?

    Since it wasn’t said yet, nukes. No one needs them.

    Deceptichum ,
    @Deceptichum@kbin.social avatar

    Who’s gonna stop the whales?

    KreekyBonez ,

    gotta nuke somethin’

    ¯\ _ (ツ) _ /¯

    ImmortanStalin ,

    NOW I CAN SEE THE WHALES!

    lars ,

    What if I’m in my own home minding my own business and an attacker named Enola comes and waltzes right in my door and how do I protect my property then?? Some people smh

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