Moved from @[email protected]
Credit: u/JG_Online and u/UltraWorlds. This is the comment on the original post from reddit:
Languages are categorized by linguistic families by colours.
So Spanish and Portugese (both being Romance) are redish shades, similarly other linguistic groups share similar shades indicating these are closely related languages. (this scheme breaks down quite a bit with so many languages but generally it checks out here, if you have some linguistic background)
The map does not include labels as to no obscure the detail we put into it, so I guess this map is mainly for ppl who already have some linguistic landscape knowledge.
Area’s which have between 30 to 70% majority are shown as striped.
Area’s with a population density below 1p/km2 are shown as sparsely populated. This does not mean no one lives there but rather that a single immigrant family can add Korean to the Sahara desert, which is not what this map is about.
Languages with less than 20,000 speakers in a populated area are not shown. (This mainly to exclude the native american languages that are overwhelmingly outpopulated in states such as NY or CA)
Linguistic Isolates are shown in various grey shades.
The friend who helped me with this map is u/UltraWorlds
I read it as a critique of human tribalism. As if aliens came and helped those they encountered, their enemies would see it as an offence to them.
AFAIK, Port Sherry’s comics are usually not part of larger series.
FYI: It’s from 2014 (see bottom left)
FYI: In the default frontend (and mlmym), the format for spoilers is:
::: spoiler Text that would be visible
Text that would be hidden
:::
This is the result:
Text that would be hidden
Source: Coffinmate – War and Peas – Webcomic
RSS Feed: https://warandpeas.com/feed/
Related: [email protected]
Hover-text:
Somehow this became inspired by nature week.
RSS Feed: https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/rss
Credit: Mr. Lovenstein :: Over the Line | Tapas Comics
RSS Feed: https://tapas.io/rss/series/3346
I asked Claude.ai to write a “witchy” theme password generator:
WARNING: This is not intended to be used to generate real passwords, they may not be secure (enough)
https://syncfiddle.net/fiddle/-NdzulDiwTeG5GCzFEn1
I think you have to push the RUN green button.
Write a program in JavaScript that generates random password phrases composed of “witchy”-theme words.
Here it is an example of a password composed of “witchy”-theme words:
SluttyUpri$ing69Kill-Kill-Kill#Destroy-Burn-It-All-D0wn
It’s a bit too serious. Rewrite the arrays adjective and nouse adding some funny words while keeping the “witchy” theme.
Now write a simple HTML frontend to use it
Witchy Password Generator
<h1>Witchy Password Generator</h1>
Generate Password
<div></div>
Hover text:
The two best reasons to get into fossils are booping trilobites and getting to say the word “fossiliferous” a lot.
Yeah, it’s interesting. If I’m not mistaken, the fire is animated as usual, frame by frame, but the characters breathing is done by fading between 2 frames, right?
Would be cool if lemmy implemented like Reddit does.
You can open an issue on the repository and, if you have the skills, you can even implement it yourself :).
TTRSS
May I ask you if you know about any public (and free?) TTRSS instance?
Thanks!
What’s the RSS link you got?
AFAIK, theere is no RSS link for saved posts. When I go to https://lemm.ee/u/Crul?view=Saved, the RSSHub Radar addon only shows this feed: https://lemm.ee/feeds/u/Crul.xml?sort=New
Note the sort=New
and the absence of anything regarding saved posts.
If I re-create the logical URL for the RSS feed of saved posts, I get a feed with my submitted posts: https://lemm.ee/feeds/u/Crul.xml?view=Saved
If I were wrong (please correct me if that’s the case), then you would probably need to provide your RSS reader with the credentials for your account… unless the saved posts are public for anyone to see, which sounds a bit weird.
I also added the source there :)