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deleted by creator


deleted by creator


I hadn’t meant to accuse you of pride, it was a poorly chosen term to indicate whether ‘union of a limited subset of cultures’ is a positive thing (= something to be proud of). I had no idea it would cause offense.


Schengen is about free movement of goods and workers. You might infer cultures from there, but as soon as that culture is Syrian or Afghan, there is pushback, so I’m not sure a union of cultures actually exists here… Perhaps for a very limited subset of cultures, but I’m not sure that’s something to be proud of, as that smells more of fascism than inclusion.


It was never a union of cultures. It started as an economic union of Coal and Steel…


Indeed! I lean heavily on similar users to me, finding unknown gems frequently!
Haha great solution! I only have cats that have no interest in reading.
As a kid I sat in front of a computer, so I got a job sitting in front of a computer. I do evening courses so I can get a different job sitting in front of a computer.


My guess is people cannot get over this book trashing Harari’s Sapiens.


Linda Hamilton was kick-ass in the latest Terminator movie. I bet she can still get shit done.
It just won’t break. I’ve been waiting for years to replace it with a newer Kobo model, for just one single reason: USB-C.
I’m relatively new to nixOS. Do you wait for some weeks before switching to the new release, or do you switch immediately?


No, I don’t, I only back up /opt/stacks to borgbase. I imagine it should be possible, but it might depend on how the projects are arranged in git. Monorepo might give trouble, but separate repo’s might work.


Does that mean I can just point it at my existing docker compose files?
You add the compose via the DockGE UI, it then creates the necessary files and folders in /opt/stacks/. Not sure whether it works the other way around: to create the folder, copy the compose file in there, and see if it is recognized.
I’ve been using it for over a year, works very smooth.


I’d recommend getting over that 7-year hump first.
That was the moment of trouble in my first serious relationship. Our interests had grown apart quite drastically at that point, which feels perfectly normal as we were kids turning into adolescents. Yet with my current girlfriend, that 7-year mark was a moment we breezed past - 13 years together now and still going strong.


Most parts of my country have a similar system as yours, and I don’t like it. One is saving up bags for an entire week until trash day. There are calls to make it one every 2 weeks, which won’t be fun in summer.
Luckily the place I’m moving to next year will have a big underground container so at all times of the day or night I can go deposit the trash there, and then they can collect the container whenever it suits them. Seems much better.


Indeed, in a natural state, that could have been the case. My idea was that when reading about the many different forms relationships took in early (pre-civilization) tribes, chances increase that the reader starts to wonder why we ever landed on monogamy as the default.


A combination of the need for conformity and a limited historical context.
Anything Elder Scrolls kept me busy much longer than the main story, most notably Morrowind. Also, I replayed GTA IV (+ stories) last week, was heaps of fun, especially compared to GTA V which I played a few months back. Read Dead Redemption 2 is a good one for this list as well, I enjoyed that one immensely, but I mainly focused on the main quest during that run-through, so this is a good reminder to myself to pick this up again soon (sadly I fell back into the pull of Satisfactory so it might be some weeks/months/… before I get to it)