Recent comments
Wahaha OP wrote
Reply to comment by Rambler in Without further context, how would you continue the following list? And what do you think the common thread is? by Wahaha
Interesting choices. Which was the common thread you saw that led you to them?
Mrwarmind wrote
Reply to Nico's Words of Wisdom by Wahaha
In other words: the lgbt and feminists
BlackWinnerYoshi wrote
Reply to Without further context, how would you continue the following list? And what do you think the common thread is? by Wahaha
I don't know how I would complete this, but let's see how GPT-2 would:
1970s — Star Wars
1966 — Superman
1966 — Superman
1966 — Star Wars
1966 — Star Wars
1966 — Superman
1966 — Superman
1966 — Batman
1966 — Superman
1966 — Superman
1966 — Superman
1966 — Superman
1966 — Batman
1966 — Superman
1966 — Batman
1966 — Batman
1966 — Superman
1966 — Batman
1966 — Batman
1966 — Batman
1966 — Batman
1966 — Batman
1966 — Batman
1966 — Batman
...not what I expected, really. Maybe GPT-3 would do better, but come on, I don't want to join the private beta just for this.
Rambler wrote
Reply to Without further context, how would you continue the following list? And what do you think the common thread is? by Wahaha
1960s - 2001: A Space Odyssey ?
1950s - Godzilla?
smartypants wrote
Reply to TweetNaCl.js - JavaScript crypto library by nobody
very good find. i implemented some of these features in the past in javascript, just some. So this is of interest to me.
thanks
Wahaha OP wrote
Reply to comment by spc50 in Normal day in Japan by Wahaha
Mostly to get attention. There are maid restaurants, but the girls working there will only wear the dress inside. The girls wearing stuff like that outside are most likely doing cosplay. Which means to dress up as someone and maybe have strangers take pictures of you.
Wahaha wrote
Reply to comment by smartypants in Best resources to learn more about Arch? by Rambler
You can have that future and I'll take my future without the bloat that is systemd. It's the Linux way. Everyone can do what they want.
nobody wrote
Reply to dmenu: Your own Custom Script Menus! by Wahaha
Thanks for sharing!
Wahaha OP wrote
Reply to comment by Kalchaya in Permaraped by Wahaha
There's a different perspective and that is that girls are basically like dogs. Some call them perpetual children. What it means is that they need someone that keeps them in check: a man.
It's not a coincidence that women are never responsible for anything under feminism and that it's always the nearest guy they blame. There's actually some truth to that.
You might want to read the manual for some insights into this perspective: https://ramble.pw/f/4chan/2621/manual-to-women
awdrifter wrote
Reply to My concert list from usenet : I love the fast Hatsune Miku songs like "The Disappearance of Hatsune Miku", but its only played outside Japan, because its too fast for the Japanese as proven in all concert footage. by smartypants
Wow, interesting. While it's not my favorite Vocaloid song, I quite like it. Hopefully they'll play it in Japan some day.
awdrifter OP wrote
Reply to comment by Wahaha in Is there a browser that can ignore SSL error? by awdrifter
Thanks for the info. I guess I'll keep using my phone for those threads for now.
nobody wrote
Reply to Best resources to learn more about Arch? by Rambler
DON'T PANIC
systemd-less OS is possible. One such example is Alpine Linux. I would even recommend going one step further and learn about daemontools
(made by DJB) and in turn to have a look at runsvdir
which is part of busybox
and is kind of reimplementation of the original idea.
Once you get to live systemd
-less, you will realize how easy it is to tame any distro. Even Debian or Ubuntu work very nicely without systemd
.
Bock to the roots! All the best!
nobody wrote
Reply to comment by J0yI9YUX41Wx in Best resources to learn more about Arch? by Rambler
Yes. The reason I switched to Arch many years ago was to get rid of all that wrappers of wrappers which are used in Debian since long time ago.
Read man pacman
and that is the most Arch that can run into your way (not counting systemd
, which is not Arch's fault, but the fact they switched to it in 2012 was their decision — so some have switched from Arch as well).
smartypants wrote
Reply to comment by spc50 in Normal day in Japan by Wahaha
girls might WORK in theme restaurants , if her face is older looking, but in Harajuku, Tokyo, dressing up and visiting Harajuku, Tokyo from hours away is a big deal on weekends for teenage girls.
Harajuku, Tokyo, especially near Jingu Bridge, especially on a Sunday
A Beginner’s Guide to Harajuku’s Lolita Fashion:
https://savvytokyo.com/a-beginners-guide-to-harajukus-lolita-fashion/
Cosplayers are people who dress up as anime, manga and cartoon characters, in specific dresses or as members of popular bands. Lolita fashion is also popular in Harajuku, ranging from a wide range of genres including gothic lolita, fairy lolita, punk lolita, and the classic lolita
smartypants wrote
Reply to comment by spc50 in Judge in Google case disturbed that 'incognito' users are tracked by Rambler
Court's own website is bugged with Google tracking bullshit.
In 2015 it was fashionable, because Google also gave your site a slight bump in searches on google lookup priority.
In 2021 its retarded to use Google tracking bullshit.
On my most important sites I lifted from bottom 200 to NUMBER ONE SEARCH ENGINE GOOGLE RESULT (meat space retail), I did NOT use any google web track bugs, just lots and lots of various normal SEO tricks, many of my own design.
The best part? I bragged I could bring the bottom 200 site to the top 10, and after one year and number one spot, the manager called me and complained his phones never ever stop ringing from people all over the world calling him, and is there any way I could make only people from his state or county call him!
HAH!
No need to use google web tracking to uplift a retail web site from bottom 200 to number one search result. NO NEED FOR GOOGLE SPY BUGS
If that court page used a paid web designer in 2014... 80% likely they would have got a google tracker slapped on it so the web designer could study his results.
Everyone should rip out google.
Kalchaya wrote
Reply to comment by Wahaha in Why cookies don't get deleted from the browser unless whitelisted? by Wahaha
Everything is pretty much a cost-benefit ratio....in this case, convenience vs inconvenience. I have no problem logging into sites in order to maintain a cookie-free PC. Well, so far as I can make it cookie-free. There is only so much Self-Destructing Cookies, BleachBit, and CCleaner will do.
Kalchaya wrote
Reply to comment by Wahaha in Which browsers can you trust enough to use? by Wahaha
As said, I've been using XP Pro for three years now, and hence relegated to using Mypal, Centaury and Firefox 52.9.0 browsers. As both the OS is long ago EOL/EOS, and the browsers are equally outdated, I'm not impressed with that malarkey.
Kalchaya wrote
Reply to comment by bransonmagee in Petition: Do not rollout Covid-19 vaccine passports by doginventer
I would think 'proof of vaccination' could be more easily forged than a passport, and therefore cheaper on the Darknet, but I've not actually looked. I don't do airplanes, and not too inclined to go outside the USA anyway, so not something I'd likely need. Mexico (Tijuana) is as far as I've been, or likely to go, and since I got a lifetime supply of Mercurochrome last time, and since the Mexican Mafia seems in control of Tijuana, I doubt I'll be returning.
DcscZx5idox wrote
Reply to What's a good search engine? by MrBlack
Search Engines - which one to choose? (onion service mirror) (eepsite mirror) - DigDeeper website
smartypants wrote (edited )
Reply to comment by Kalchaya in What features do you look for in a VPN? by Rambler
WARNING regarding :
"guess it could be pick of the litter"
Spooks claim any VPN that well run, domiciled that close to USA shores, is run by the Chinese military via paid proxies.
That rumor is spread by jew Mossad, US LEA, and others, and its a 10% chance that ExpressVPN makes most of its real money from the pension fund of the Chinese Military... but no proof.
The only proof is:
"Express VPN is just too good"
At least though, for a non-chinese citizen and those not planning to visit China, that 10% chance is not dire.
90% of all legacy VPNs are run by nation states (CIA in the mid 2000s in terror war), just like 90% of high speed Tor exit points are run y nation states.
so 10% chance that ExpressVPN is chinese government is no big shock if true.
Just do not use ExpressVPN to undermine china, and use other vpns if needed, and you are fine.
A new-hire Hong Kong VICE PRESIDENT of ExpressVPN "Harold Li" a famous Freedom Fighter, does speak perfect Chinese and ExpressVPN was third largest VPN in China, but the chinese that run ExpressVPN is not proof that the Chinese government pays to run ExpressVPN
Kalchaya wrote
Reply to comment by smartypants in What features do you look for in a VPN? by Rambler
There are others based outside 14-Eyes, but ExpressVPN ticks more boxes than them, so I guess it could be pick of the litter.
Kalchaya wrote
Reply to comment by Wahaha in Permaraped by Wahaha
I don't think divorce is bad, it's what the feminazis have mutated it into...basically a State sanctioned get-rich-quick scheme for golddiggers!
I would disagree. Those women should of divorced their guy who was obviously way too good for them, and by doing so, the freed guys now have a chance to learn from their mistake, and make better choices in the future. The bitches now have a chance to marry (or just breed with) thugboys...who will treat them as shitty as they treated the ex....a mutually abusive relationship is exactly what such gals deserve.
Kalchaya wrote
Reply to comment by spc50 in Phone faraday bags. Anyone use one? What do you use and how/when do you use it? by Rambler
For every rule there is always an exception. Good job! Whenever I go out (seldom lately) I see idiots with pocketphones constantly yapping or texting. Or them that answer a call, put it back in their pocket, a minute later its back in hand, then back in the pocket, then back in hand, over and over. I think it's like smoking pot...some of us can limit use to before bedtime, while addictive personalities have to stay high 24/7.
smartypants wrote (edited )
Reply to comment by Wahaha in Best resources to learn more about Arch? by Rambler
Not bloated at all.
In fact Steve Jobs put the entire MASSIVE Macintosh Operating System (OS X) and much of its gui libraries on the first 2008 iPhone.
People claimed (almost 99% of computer experts) that the iPhone would never sell even 2 million phones, and the giant huge OS (vastly larger than android OS) was insane to put in a Phone..
Steve Jobs merely responded... "You are wrong. No Compromises. Technology will keep up and its the FUTURE we are building for. The FUTURE"
APPLE over 2 TRILLION DOLLAR MARKET CAP from its "Bloat" ! Proof tonight!
https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/AAPL/
See? Market cap of all Stock over 2 Trillion dollars, and the biggest stock holder is Apple, followed by lucky Warren Buffet (5.04% as of last week).
2 Trillion from using Systemd (Launchd)
avoiding the future will never be a wise strategy in technology world.
98% of all running lunix desktops and servers now use awesome systemd.... for 100 great technical reasons. All 100 together are called bloat by you, and thats just crazy. If it had 49,000 new technologies, it might be bloat, but 100 new technologies to modernize Linux and keep up with Apple, is NOT BLOAT.
Apple did not tell Linux to copy its open source designs and put them into Linux... Linux distros all wisely took Apple Systemd (Launchd) and ported it to all the linux distributions used (98% in volume surveys).
Hurray for Systemd! It Won!
I do admit apple currentloy did NOT put its entire massive OS X (BSD unix) into the womans iWatch. The tiny iWatch needed space for autonomous cell phone chip , wifi, heart beat monitor, fall injury monitor (saved people plummeting off mountains already), auto 911 dialing, speaker voice monitoring, and links to nearby apple devices. No room in 2016 for all that. The Next iWatch may have the entire gigantic glorious 2 trillion dollar market cap operating system shoved into t the womans iWatch.
Apple iWatch has a built-in feature that calls emergency services when it detects its user has experienced a hard fall: https://people.com/human-interest/apple-watch-calls-for-help-man-falls-off-cliff/
iWatch to have entire massive gigantic macintosh OS and a working cell phone, all on a womans watch!
The final giant iWatch OS update for older watches, before going 100% iPhone OS in 2022 , internally has countless features in it including 24 hour Siri AI voice assistant even if no cell towers and no wifi and no blu tooth connection to another apple device :
https://www.macworld.co.uk/news/watchos-8-release-date-3800809/
Wow! All those things on a little watch!
3 Trillion market cap for Apple is their next Target (50% stock increase from now)
And Apple thanks Systemd (Launchd) for much of that current 2 trillion dollars.
In fact, 98% of the linux engineering experts now in 2021 lauch at the luddites and halfwits screeching against the glorious systemd with their emotions instead of facts.
The smear word "bloat" without logical argument, is laughed at the same way Steve jobs laughed when selling the iPhone in 2008 with entire giant mac operating system inside it.
NO COMPROMISES. Its not Bloat, its the FUTURE.
smartypants wrote (edited )
Reply to Without further context, how would you continue the following list? And what do you think the common thread is? by Wahaha
Not enough data points.
And I am a person who subscribed to five different filmmaking,cinematographer,producer,SFX magazines and a few exotic underground film quarterlies for 25 years.
I looked for letters , vowel patterns, us soil release date months, box office takes, runtimes, amount of CGI, etc.
Not enough datapoints for me. And as a logician, i disregard 1960s and 1960s as possible empty sets in the above puzzle, and possible red herrings, though in most IQ oriented test corpus questions, the blanks are meant to not be null sets (WISC-R Full Scale, WISC-IV extended, Stanford-Binet, WPPSI-III, etc). Null sets as part of a puzzle are not considered valid in a open ended answer, and only used in multiple choice answers.