![](https://lemmy.sdf.org/pictrs/image/3c394df9-70e8-4c11-bf03-6e72bd834453.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/4271bdc6-5114-4749-a5a9-afbc82a99c78.png)
LOL I’d love to see you prove me wrong. Go on ahead. It’s easy!
God, debate perverts are annoying.
LOL I’d love to see you prove me wrong. Go on ahead. It’s easy!
God, debate perverts are annoying.
Thanks for the info!
I think, in this context “cultural capital” refers to one’s social standing in their community. The higher the cultural capital one has, the higher one is in the social hierarchy, generally.
Good grades -> seen favorably by those around you -> higher social standing (increased cultural capital)
My bad, thanks for the source!
By definition, if the user of the software is not free to do as they wish with the software, the software is not free/libre. It could fit the definition of open source, but it is not free/libre if you are restricting what the user can do with your source code.
And starting comments with “Wrong.” Is just rude.
This guy licenses his comments under creative commons for some reason.
Uh, this is a photo of a clothes dryer.
Alpine is an alternative to GNU that can also be used with the Linux kernel.
I work in a hospital pharmacy, and I had to compound some custom eye drops for a patient the other day. I have to wear a hair net, beard net, shoe covers, a gown, and sterile gloves to even enter the cleanroom. Being barefoot in a cleanroom for sterile manufacturing is a hard no.
I’m not sure about your specific setup, but usually on mobiles you can hold your finger on a letter to see variants/accent marks.