how gay is this image?
>>119 > pink danger hair, too We got ourselves a White-hating shitlib homo-lover!
i can see why being turned off by smoking is a thing, but idk i can dig it if its with a hot chick. idgaf what political orientation or ideals you espouse if we get along anyway
>>53 most of the places I've seen with this shit up have basically been like >lmao some cunt's AI training scraper tried to download our 20MB site over 9000 times in a row from a fucking bunch of IPs and I'm out of bandwidth for the month, so fuck that bullshit
Big search engines like Google track your activity and sell your data for ads — which is why a lot of us don’t search freely anymore. I’ll share a few alternatives I’ve found, and would love to hear what others are using too! DuckDuckGo: Best for untracked searching Startpage: Best for unprofiled browsing MyAllSearch: Clean interface and an emphasis on user privacy. Qwant: GDPR-protected searching Startpage: Combines the top results of multiple engines, primarily Gigablast and Yandex.
udm14.com is cool for using google without the attached ai they have right now
Also google custom search was cool when I used it for images maybe a year or two ago
I’ve reviewed a few of the options listed, and the results are largely the same across the board. What I find frustrating, though, is the constant appearance of 'AI Suggestions.' I’d prefer to do my own searching without having snippets pushed at me. I get that this is the direction things are heading, but seriously—if I want an AI-generated summary, I’ll ask for one. I can't be the only one fed up with that!!!
o here is a list I created of basic digital privacy tools to consider using in the current landscape. Web Browsers: Firefox: A trusted, open-source browser known for its commitment to privacy. LibreWolf: A privacy-focused, Mozilla-based browser with enhanced security features. Brave: A privacy-first browser that blocks ads and trackers by default. Private Search Engines: MyAllSearch: A UK-based search engine offering privacy with no cookies or tracking. DuckDuckGo: A widely-used, US-based search engine that prioritizes anonymity. SwissCows: A privacy-driven search engine leveraging secure Swiss infrastructure. Qwant: A French-based metasearch engine with a focus on privacy and safe browsing. MetaGer: A German-based, open-source metasearch engine offering privacy and a variety of helpful tools. Password Managers: Message too long. Click here to view the full text.
good stuff
C++, Py, Go, Rust, or Java?
68k assembly for amiga https://mrjester.hapisan.com/04_MC68/
>>55 B# morelike
twitter faggot image
> no Questions That Don't Deserve Their Own Thread (QTDDTOT) So here it is now. As for this Question That Didn't Deserve Its Own Thread: What do you call it, when you press hold a letter or number on your physical keyboard, that determines how fast that number or letter gets "auto-typed" and how short the delay is before inserting said character? I'm using Fluxbox on MX Linux, and I don't know what that setting is called, meaning I don't even know what man page or setting/system application's called that's buried somewhere to look up and RTFM. If it matters: here's the neofetch for this 11-yo PC which hasn't been updated for several years. It doesn't say which exact version of Fluxbox and which exact version of MX is being used, don't know which exact key terms to web-search to find out how to show that info, and it's likely irrelevant.
Key repeat/key repeat rate? (I threw your question into GPT and got that, try looking it up to verify).
Saint Tee delivers to us a new bulletin board script. It runs on go, has multiboard support, forum functionality, and a news section. Let us say bless u Saint Tee, patron saint of Julian Lyons Ph D. Repo: https://codeberg.org/tslocum/sriracha Demo: https://sriracha.rocket9labs.com/ Reply to this thread with a bless u to Tee.
bless u tee
go
Tightly compiled kernel with no network interface. Oh wait. It's plan9. Networking is an add-on. Me love u long time
>>57 It's an add-on in Unix; Plan 9 was built for the network.
Linux Mint is really good for everyone, beginners and people who want an out-of-the-box experience. Plus, it's community driven.
Linux Mint is really good
it's not
>>69 why are you heterosexual and cisgender?
just sharing my new build, i call it the raspberry pwn
>>50 baleeted because i accidentally leaked phpsessid
needs moar ram :'( it's just not enough......
>>51 lolKusabax >>45 Can't go wrong with Kali, though it does have a skiddie reputation (ironic coming from this place but yeh), it is a nice distro with nice h4x0r t00lz.
10,000 hours in Python.
Moesha the contract work hacker is going to find you and suck yo dick!
>>4 mumu ogun thunderstrike your vibe coding
>>4 dont threaten me wit a good time bish