At least on Lemmy, every post and comment has a colorful button that serves as a link to the original post (i.e. on the poster's home instance). I just used that button to see this post on your home instance and it seems that there, it is hidden behind the "More" menu and called "Open original URL".
So that gives you links to the post on all home instances of the users who have already commented in the thread.
yup I too remember getting YouTube ads in Hungarian when I was there as a tourist - despite not understanding Hungarian at all and watching videos only in other languages, they really ought to know that
I don't think Trump knows very much about anything he's doing, whether this or anything else.
(Incidentally, this also means I don't think he's doing most of the bad things he's doing out of malice or dictatorial ambitions. He just has no idea about anything he's doing.)
I found it (in the mid-2000s as a preteen) before I consciously learned about the original Bohemian Rhapsody, so every time I now hear the latter, my mind immediately goes "what happen, what happen, somebody set up us the bomb, somebody set up us the bomb".
In Spanish, as far as I know, "americano" = inhabitant of the American continent, "estadounidense" = person from the US, so I don't think Mexicans would be offended at the first, at least not in Spanish.
API = a communication interface between different pieces of software, can be running on the same machine (e.g. a library API) or on another (e.g. a HTTP API)
library = code that provides some reusable functionality that someone else wrote and that you, as the application developer, are calling and using the return values of
package = can mean different things depending on context and programming language, the metaphor is that it is code that somehow belongs together, but there's no general way to define this
framework = code that provides the general structure of code and that is extended by the application developer to implement actual functionality
The way it's been explained to me is that the difference between a library and a framework is that a library is something that you call from your code, a framework is something that calls your code.
Agree with the main point, though disagree that FOSS is "boycotting capitalism", many for-profit companies contribute to FOSS and FOSS can be used by for-profit companies too, much of today's capitalism runs on FOSS.
The point of free software is that it does not have owners, so what exactly are you "boycotting"?
I remember reading that police training in most other countries takes a much longer time and much more effort than in the US. I am sure this is a factor.
I remember for some time following a LibreWolf community that was hosted on Lemmy from my Mastodon account and wondering why all the LibreWolf team was doing was reposting Lemmy comments (some of which I'd already seen on Lemmy). Then I figured out what was going on, now I know a lot more about ActivityPub. :D
Coalitions and minority governments have happened in the UK too (e.g. early 2010s was a coalition between Conservatives and Liberal Democrats), but much more rarely than in a system with proportional representation (like Austria). Usually in the UK the party that gets the most votes does also get a majority of seats.
would confuse me because when I hear "provider" I think ISP before anything else