I’d probably take a bite a day after they took a bite
she/they, non-binary transfeminine individual based in Berlin
I’d probably take a bite a day after they took a bite
How you could somewhat rebase manually (to understand the effect; or because you like to handle the merge conflicts more granular or be more selective):
We assume we have the branch “Feat” which was started on an old version of “Main”, and now want to rebase it:
Et viola - you kinda manually rebased “Feat” on “Main”
There are four types of people:
It’s debatable if they really understand it, or if they just press the buttons that make their humans happy. And dogs are really good in spotting even the tiniest clues in our body language
I doubt we are far enough to train ai for animal-human translation on more than a conceptual level, and I doubt that I would hear about it from dolphins for the first time.
I expect a widely covered story of translating dogs’ barks (or cats) first, and not in a “Hello Human, Welcome back home, I missed you. Please give me food” way (which would be probably fake) but just “Friend! Joy. Hungry”
And I don’t know how we could scientifcally differentiate a slur from a descriptive name on that conceptual level.
What I don’t doubt is that dolphins have slurs for humans.
Not with that attitude
This could lead to traumatized customers and a bad image as heartless company.
(or be a total win if the cat stays on top and became the new mascot; but guess they don’t want to take the risk)
If you wish so:
I’m not the only one who ran around the fountain in the courtyard 128 times to try to get Luigi in my game
Scrolled past it. (quickly)
My head: “was that a mini-pizza under a microscope?!”
Scrolling bad.
“Oh, sadly just a regular sized pizza and a read kitchen appliance. Looks yummy, tho”
How often do you have to use it?
One could say it’s wonderful
Imaging having to sit down in front of a mirror every time you eat.
Well, that doesn’t mean it’s not done.
My sister had a few (more than 20 simultaneously) rats.
One rat got stuck with her tail in the cage, and the tail had to be amputated, or the rat would’ve died. There were a few complications during the operation, and the bill would have skyrocketed to more than 2k€. For a tiny rat.
Needless to say, my sister insisted the operation continue. Rat lived happily for another 18 months