

Is there any evidence for what was actually removed or do we have to take this guy’s word for it?
Is there any evidence for what was actually removed or do we have to take this guy’s word for it?
Without the Google Search deal, Firefox will have less resources to build a competent browser.
Firefox has neglected their browser for years, pursuing vanity features like pocket instead of implementing web standards.
I don’t believe, at least in Germany, that it is possible for sugar to be made ‘locally’ at a reasonable price and with enough volume to be able to stock shelves. I don’t see why the situation should be different in (I assume) the US.
You might try gift shops. They sometimes have ‘fancy’ versions of basic stuff to gift away. Looking at their products and producers might give you a hint at where to start researching.
You could open Google maps (or any other commercial directory) and try to find shops in your town that you wouldn’t otherwise notice because they don’t advertise on channels you’d consume.
My initial guess was that sudo would eat up the echo’d foo as the password. Maybe sudo
works differently when invoked via zsh?
Can’t reproduce.
16:22:48:~/tmp$ echo foo | sudo tee newfile
[sudo] Passwort für bleistift2:
foo
16:23:02:~/tmp$ ls -l newfile
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 4 Feb 23 16:22 newfile
Unsubstantiated claim: Any set of rules that aim at distributing money according to some merit can be exploited in a way that those who get the most money are not those providing the most value.
Or less formally: Any game can be cheesed.
Something like “I’ll be the first to say that I don’t know anything about this.”
You get downvotes for a completely useless statement. Who’d have thunk?
Do you mean…
body > article > h1
is smaller than body > h2
body > article > h1
is smaller than body > article > h2
?And where? Which spec stylesheets are you talking about?
For (1), https://css-tricks.com/document-outline-dilemma/ might answer your question.
Maybe start rendering pages right?
Just to provide some data on the radiation dose. It’s everyone’s own decision whether a ‘willy-nilly’ PET scan is worth it.
From the English Wikipedia:
FDG, which is now the standard radiotracer used for PET neuroimaging and cancer patient management, has an effective radiation dose of 14 mSv.
The amount of radiation in FDG is similar to the effective dose of spending one year in the American city of Denver, Colorado (12.4 mSv/year). […T]he whole body occupational dose limit for nuclear energy workers in the US is 50 mSv/year.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positron_emission_tomography#Safety
From the German Wikipedia:
Es ist bei einer Strahlendosis von 1 Sievert (Sv), der 100 Menschen ausgesetzt sind, mit 5 Todesfällen durch Strahlenkrebs zu rechnen […]. Man müsste also 100.000 PET-Untersuchungen durchführen, um 35 Todesfälle an Strahlenkrebs (nach einer mittleren Latenzzeit von etwa 15 Jahren für Leukämie und etwa 40 Jahren für solide Tumoren) zu verursachen, das heißt etwa eine auf 3000 Untersuchungen
If 100 people received a radiation dose of 1 Sievert (Sv), one would expect 5 deaths due to radiation-induced cancer […]. One would need 100,000 PET scans in order to cause 35 cancer deaths (after a median wait duration of 15 years for leucemia and 40 years for solid tumors), which is about 1 in 3000 scans.
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positronen-Emissions-Tomographie#Strahlenexposition
A text editor that doesn’t assume that the keys on my keyboard are in the same order as yours.
Aww. I confused “communities” for “instances” when I read the title. Thanks for pointing it out.
Your data quality is questionable. You list only 2 communities for feddit.org. Lemmy Explorer has 148. I doubt that they’re all ‘suspicious’. And if they are, then that flag is itself suspicious.
Please avoid any and all situations in which you might have the chance of handling any kind of categorized data, for the sake of all of us.
At the end of my 20s I can feel that I’m becoming stupider. Reading texts or just thinking about a problem take more effort than they used to.
No, it does.
To answer the original question, even though @RedWeasel@lemmy.world’s advice really is superior:
All commands that can be executed via your shell must live in your
$PATH
or their subdirectories. You could enumerate all files in there, filter by being executable, and run them with the--help
argument.You can then filter these commands by their exit code. If
--help
is a recognized flag, the exit code should be0
. Otherwise it should be something else. (Running every command blindly might be a bad idea though.)