Lukewarm.
If I can install the program from a .deb I'll do it, even if it's outdated in comparison with the flatpak version. But if there's only a flatpak version I'll use it.
Lukewarm.
If I can install the program from a .deb I'll do it, even if it's outdated in comparison with the flatpak version. But if there's only a flatpak version I'll use it.
It's a general pattern someone noticed and then rhymed, that ⟨ie⟩ is more likely to appear than ⟨ei⟩ in English, except after ⟨c⟩. But it is not a real rule, there's no orthographic restriction behind that pattern, not even an underlying phonemic reason. So you're bound to see exceptions everywhere, to the point the pattern is useless as a mnemonic.
I made Siegfrieda a cardboard tank:

She loved it.
(I'm planning to redo it later on, to make it better-looking for humans. Plus build Kika a house, it'll be called "le Chat-eau".)
She's in deep reflection, regretting her last Tonitrus bolt.
...not really.
It was also full of things a few people would love, and most would hate. Eventually replaced by things that are bland, unoffensive, "one size for all"; nobody hates them, but nobody loves them either.
I live in a temperate region, so sub-zero temperatures are already kind of uncommon, even in winter. So it barely snows here - last two times were in 1975 and in 2013. (It does hail sometimes, though. Bloody hail last year killed one of my pepper plants ;_;)
That said I'd probably shape and pack individual blocks. Perhaps even glue them together with some water, if it's cold enough for that.
Corporations. The matter is how: walled gardens, exploiting the commons, EEE, creating new barriers of entry, etc.
I think AI could be used to check ones work so we don’t get typos in translations
It's great you mentioned this, because I forgot to do it: AI is a great proofreader. Specially if you're going to send the stuff to an actual = human proofreader later on; it means they won't need to pay attention to spelling or grammar, they can focus better on meaning and style.
Based on file modification dates, it's this drunken cow:

It's from October 2004. Initially I doodled it in my lab notebook; back then I was a Chemistry freshman, and I always doodled my stuff like this. Then I redid it in a computer.
(Her name is Vaquetila. Vaca = cow, etila = ethyl.)
“It's a real, serious failing of human beings that we take 5 years to translate [Ascendance of a Bookworm,] a series of 33 books, while AI does it in an afternoon,” he said.
If I had to guess, most of those five years were spent on a handful of specially problematic chapters, while the bulk of the books was relatively straightforward.
Quof said he does not take MTPE jobs because “I think I have enough skill in Japanese and English that MTL tools do not currently improve my output. It would make my workflow harder because, as one used to providing 97% or higher accuracy, I would feel compelled to fix the AI's errors up to that high standard, and that would slow me down dramatically.” But over the years, Quof has had a habit of checking his own translations against AI tools.
My experience pretty much matches Quof's: it takes longer to fix a shitty machine translation than to do it by hand. It is however useful to check how ChatGPT or Google Translate would do it, specially for the problem bits.
I spent 2 hours trying to make the RAM follow the color scheme
Dunno if you had the same issue as I did, where OpenRGB didn't detect the RAM sticks, and they simply used the default colour scheme. But, just in case this helps anyone here, here's how I fixed it in my computer. (I'll explain how through the terminal, for my own convenience, but do note you could use grub-customiser instead. Also, note that in my case the system is installed, not running through a USB stick.)
sudo nano /etc/default/grub, Enter, type your password, Enter.GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT. It'll have a few words after it, like quiet splash; after all those words, add acpi_enforce_resources=lax. Save (Ctrl+O) then exit (Ctrl+X) the file.sudo update-grub.With that out of the way: Linux is not to blame for either issue, but Apple and mobo manufacturers respectively. Both love some vendor lock-in, and do everything they can to prevent compatibility between their own junk and competitors. (You can be pretty sure iTunes wouldn't work with Windows if MacOS market share was higher.)
You got me curious, so I checked it.
I downloaded this wordlist with 479k words, and used find+replace to count four strings:
cie,cei,ie,ei. Here's the result:ievs. 5649 (25%)eicie(74%) vs. 302cei(26%)So the basic rule (i before e) holds some merit, but the "except after
c" part is bullshit - it's practically the same distribution.Of course, this takes all words as equiprobable; results would be different if including the odds of a word appearing in the text into the maths.