It's a lot better these days. Here's how you could use it to improve the English in your comment:
Can you point out and characterise the grammar mistakes in the following sentence, with tips on how the writer could avoid similar mistakes in future - "I must admit its been a while, but all these things where horrible last time i played with them."
Sure — that sentence has a few grammar issues, each pointing to a common kind of slip. Here's the breakdown:
"its been a while" → "it's been a while"
Mistake: "its" is a possessive pronoun (like his, her, their), while "it's" is the contraction of "it has".
Fix: Use "it's" because the writer means "it has been a while".
Tip: When in doubt, try expanding “it’s” to “it is” or “it has” and see if the sentence still makes sense. If it doesn’t, you probably want "its".
"where horrible" → "were horrible"
Mistake: "where" (a location) is confused with "were" (past tense of are).
Fix: Use "were" to correctly form the past tense of "to be".
Tip: Say it aloud—“they were horrible” sounds natural, while “they where horrible” doesn’t. If it’s a verb (they were), you want "were".
"i played" → "I played"
Mistake: Lowercase "i".
Fix: Always capitalize "I" when it's a pronoun referring to oneself.
Tip: This is more about habit than logic—just train yourself to always type "I" in uppercase, even in casual writing.
Full corrected version:
"I must admit it's been a while, but all these things were horrible last time I played with them."
I was puzzled by this too, so I took one for the team and clicked the link. Yes it does appear to mean that there were less users using the Chinese language in this survey than the one for the previous month, which implies fewer Chinese users: "Last month we saw quite a sharp drop for the Linux stats, which coincided with Simplified Chinese once again rising as the language choice on Steam. This is something that happens now and then."
There's really nothing special about Jesus, if you accept that the voices he heard in his head were not really "the all-powerful creator" speaking to him.
What I mean is that Jesus did not say anything more remarkable or ground-breaking than say Socrates, Marx or .. I don't know Iain M Banks or any other story teller. Way less remarkable in fact.
There's this persistent idea that Jesus was some wonderful caring hippy, and before Jesus everyone was just a callous exploitive bastard. But there's nothing new about the share-and-share-alike philosophy Jesus espoused. It's basic game theory and has been present in society since before our species even evolved. Even chimps grasp those ideas.
Jesus was just a poor Jewish common person who thought he was the messiah. Just like his compatriots of the time, he believed the Jews to be the "chosen people", and his message was only directed at his compatriots. He had no more grasp of humanity as a whole than any other common person of his time. As the messiah, he believed - as did his followers - that he was going to usher in the end of the world.
It's complete nonsense, and if you truely understand what a scam the modern church is, you would stop promoting him as some kind of revolutionary.
I feel like MAGA might not come to his defense this time.
Hope this isn't wishful thinking. Trump thinks his son is a l33t hacker for being able to turn a laptop on. Musk on the other hand owns a major social media platform and has access to skilled technicians and programmers, as well as huge server farms which he doubtless uses to analyse voter behaviour and find the weak points where efforts should be focused in order to have most impact on electoral choices.
Trump certainly understands how essential to the disinfo effort Musk is, even though it's way beyond the grasp of your average MAGA. IMO Trump is not going to abandon Musk in a hurry.
Yes it seems to be the same underlying issue that leads some people to throw money at only fans streamers and such like. A complete starvation of personal contact that leads people to willingly live in a fantasy world.
It was also a true AI wasn't it? It ran locally and was never turned off, so conversations with it were private and it continued to "exist" and develop by itself.
Alright, stick your head in the ground if it makes you feel special. You're clearly too deeply invested in this to listen to reason. It obviously doesn't matter what you or anyone else believes anyway.
Hinduism is pretty incompatible with the Jesus narrative
Of course it is lol
If there were a real god that cared about what rituals you perform in this life, then you would expect multiple religions to appear independently all over the world with the exact same rituals. But that has never happened once. Every single religion is totally different from all other religions that are properly independent of it.
Never has divine inspiration revealed the same "truth" in different parts of the world independently. Almost as if it's all just common or garden mental illness.
Don't you think the Jesus story would be a terrible way for an omnipotent being to send an important message that's vital for everyone to hear? Just creating a normal human and plonking them in some desert backwater - who looks and sounds just like any other human. The only difference is he hears voices in his head, and can pull off some pretty mediocre magic tricks.
If all it takes is an appealing story to convince you that something with literally no evidence is true and you should devote your life to it, there are many other stories like that, check out the Baghavad Gita for instance. Some really wonderful characters and truly fantastic events - not to mention absolutely mind-blowing magic, all of it completely true (apparently).
I think they mean that ARM became dominant by widely licencing its RISC architecture to pretty much anyone. This startup wants to make RISC V designs and licence them to various chip manufacturers - so they won't be in the business of making chips themselves, just the design.
But as long as they are RISC V chips, then they would run the same software as any other RISC V chips.
fraid I generated a tl;dr for this rather verbose article:
"Home directories are a mess because too many apps ignore XDG spec and dump dotfiles everywhere. The problem isn’t just legacy software—new apps do it too, often out of ignorance or laziness. Windows has similar issues with profile folders. Fixing it requires devs to actually follow standards, but many resist due to inertia or 'my way is better' thinking. Users should push back and demand proper XDG compliance to keep $HOME clean."
Well like it or not, your footer is just a part of your comments, and so people are invited to respond however they wish when you post it on lemmy. If you don't like people making the same replies, you can simply stop posting the same content in every comment.
It's a lot better these days. Here's how you could use it to improve the English in your comment:
Mistake: "its" is a possessive pronoun (like his, her, their), while "it's" is the contraction of "it has". Fix: Use "it's" because the writer means "it has been a while".
Tip: When in doubt, try expanding “it’s” to “it is” or “it has” and see if the sentence still makes sense. If it doesn’t, you probably want "its".
Mistake: "where" (a location) is confused with "were" (past tense of are). Fix: Use "were" to correctly form the past tense of "to be".
Tip: Say it aloud—“they were horrible” sounds natural, while “they where horrible” doesn’t. If it’s a verb (they were), you want "were".
Mistake: Lowercase "i". Fix: Always capitalize "I" when it's a pronoun referring to oneself.
Tip: This is more about habit than logic—just train yourself to always type "I" in uppercase, even in casual writing.
Full corrected version: "I must admit it's been a while, but all these things were horrible last time I played with them."