forcing passengers to flee
Err, why? We know they’re not rabid since it’s the UK, so why not just ignore them?
New account since lemmyrs.org went down, other @Deebster
s are available.
forcing passengers to flee
Err, why? We know they’re not rabid since it’s the UK, so why not just ignore them?
Perhapsburg they are
Only if enough people do it. Then again, loads scrapers outside of AI already pretend to be normal browsers.
What about proxies and the like? It might be less relevant in a world where most communication happens under TLS.
Makes a lot of sense - it’s a GET with the body from POST (I know, there’s more to it than that). Definitely cleaner than encoding a huge URL or query string.
However, we’re still implementing IPv6, so how long until we could actually use this?
I want David Mitchell to try this show at some point, but I doubt he’d be willing to do it.
Victoria Coren Mitchell did it, and she’s about the same “seriousness” (as comics go).
Jack Dee is a very well known face on British TV, in part for hosting Live at the Apollo before it became rotating hosts. Grumpy, dry and deadpan, he’s someone Alex has consistently mentioned when asked who he’d love to have on the show.
Rosie Jones has been on a lot of panel shows lately, and is quite a marmite taste - people seem to love or hate her. In my house we’re not a fan in large part because her punchlines are all shock humour, which doesn’t really work once you’re expecting it. I’m hoping she’ll grow as a comedian - Sarah Millican’s routine seemed to be 99% I’m fat earlier on but now she’s great.
I’ve not watched anything with Andy Zaltzman in and I don’t know the other two at all.
Andy Zaltzman’s bubbles task was a thing of beauty, it’s only right that he got the top marks.
Then him dragging that spot around on the final task, chef’s kiss
Talking of, Emma Sidi’s abysmal throwing was wonderful (and Baba channelling Dr McCoy).
Jack Dee is turning out to be the mostly-joyless joy we knew he would be.
In the studio task, did Rosie just completely fluke into the right answer with a vaguely plausible reason?
Shame on you APNews for not including any Hoiho memes
Mirror for NYTimes article: https://archive.ph/C7Z6g
The term you want is “cross compile”. I’ve developed simple programs for the Pi on Windows and it’s simple enough to produce a static binary (using Rust, anyway). When extra dependencies come in it’s better to develop on the same OS, but targeting different architectures is the easy bit.
Token-based string distances looks like exactly what I need for my current side project - I’m using Levenshtein but I should be comparing based on words, not characters.
I just need to figure out which (if any) of these does what I need.
Edit: looks like the Python version has that information: https://github.com/life4/textdistance?tab=readme-ov-file#algorithms
stacking prefixes is disallowed (e.g. 10 k km), and because using mega is both correct and more concise (e.g. 10 Mm).
If you’re talking distances and you say Mm, I’m far more likely to assume you mean millimetres. It might be technically correct, but it’s bad communication.
How did you find Leptos to work with? I never got further than the tutorial so I have yet to form a real opinion on it.
The first thing to happen is that any liquids (saliva, tears, blood) will start to boil in the very low pressure, but your body won’t explode like in some films. This boiling will pull heat from your body causing your nose and mouth to nearly freeze.
Another film trope is that you freeze over, but you’ll often overheat first since you can’t radiate your heat away quickly enough (depending on if you’re in sunlight or not).
Oh, you’re right - somehow I missed seeing the entire bottom third of the image.
And they’ve highlighted the whole of the UK for “England”. Scotland has the thistle, Wales has the daffodil and Wikipedia says that flax is widely used as a symbol of Northern Ireland.
I think of England’s rose as red, because of the rugby.
Why are you quoting a US site for a case in China?
I recognised it at three, but couldn’t name it. Turns out even with multiple choice I’d still be guessing!
Others have answered, but the UK has been rabies free for over a century!
per DEFRA