here they like to replace the road, then the next year the sewer, then later that year the sidewalk which somehow requires the road too, then they're putting in infrastructure for the new LRT over a year and a bit, now they're switching out the lights for a roundabout
Nah can't find anything about it really. The odd thing tipping me off was my browser suddenly opening file:///tmp/ta.html on clicking a vid. I'm on linux, so I'm prolly safe. That page looks like a phish of the Google search page - which is weird in many respects, because (a) it used Google dutch (which I never use) and (b) Chrome should not be creating files in /tmp/ (c) Certainly web pages shouldn't be creating files (d) I didn't navigate to it.
So whatever it is, it's fishy, but I can't find a reference to it on a security site (yet)
Well, that's really correlation. Like I said, I suspect a hijacked click or other event, and malvertising. I've checked the vid I tried to click after going back and the link is to YT as expected
It certainly happened on that page and I'm totally not surprised seeing the tons of crap that it loads :)
The EZTV site has some nasty stuff in it. I have even turned off images and they still manage to briefly pop up a new tab that closes immediately occasionally.
> You could download the entire Geocities archives, about 652 GB worth of site files, as mentioned in this article: Geocities Lives On as Massive Torrent Download | WIRED
heh
funny how that's not actually out of the realm of possibility
and as for repetition, it's true that the core gameplay revolves around a few core mechanics, but that's true for any game, I found it less repetitive than many other games
I will agree that it's not challenging enough but then, I have yet to encounter any straight games that are challenging enough
would have to speculate that he really offended Jerry in that case, whereas ordinarily he's quite accepting of like, trolls, they're just a thing that happens, boot them and move on
@R.MartinhoFernandes His personality (or lack thereof) I guess--he's fairly careful to sort of stay almost within the letter of the law (so to speak), but constantly (like even quite a bit more the Telkitty) attacks people. Worse, the people he attacks are mostly those in no position to defend themselves. IOW, he's basically like a kid who pulls the wings off of flies.
> Western leaders cannot expect to defeat "terrorism" in their countries when they deny and evade acknowledging the roots of the jihadi phenomenon: the deep connection of the attacks to the faith. Admitting this connection will not only be more respectful to Muslims, it will also be conducive to reforms and useful to Muslim reformists, who acknowledge that the terrorists' ideals come from within: from the houses of worship, the schools and society at large.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Eh, save scumming is a core mechanic of basically all PC games, seems like either you work well with it or you just cry in a corner and break
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Yeah. If only someone would have told Moses. Saved him a lot of sweat, going up that mountain. Twice. And Aaron wouldn't have messed up with the anti-superstition guardianship
@Puppy On one hand, it undoubtedly is trying to keep things fairly short and simple (which they are in the original Hebrew). The problem is that there is no English word that corresponds directly to the Hebrew word in the original, which apparently means something closer to "wrongfully destroy", so it probably applies not only to killing people, but also to things like vandalism. On the other hand, the Bible never uses that word to refer to killing people in battle.
@JerryCoffin Maybe they did decide to just give themselves an out then, just tell the common folks not to kill people but if you're writing the laws do what you want
I saw a hilarious video in Shogun 2 Total War about a ninja sneaking into a camp, and he gets his leg caught in a sleeping soldier and then trips over another soldier
@R.MartinhoFernandes Well, sort of. As I recall, the statement was that it's free from error with respect to faith and morals, or something on that order. On the other hand, it was not said in an ex cathedra statement, so there may be some room for question about whether it's truly binding on all Catholics either.
For those curious: ex cathedra with the full authority of office (especially that of the Pope, implying infallibility as defined in Roman Catholic doctrine).
@CaptainGiraffe If we're going to get into that: as quite recently defined in Roman Catholic doctrine. Specifically, papal infallibility didn't become doctrine until Vatican Council I, in 1870. There had been several attempts at it previously, and at least one pope declared the notion to be the work of the devil...
@LucDanton Hmmm...but it also says (apparently talking about just that one word, not the commandment in general) "to dash in pieces", which would seem to do a bit more to support my (admittedly lousy) memory.
@sehe You wouldn't happen to have a link to it? I think it was Tony the Lion stating that Giraffe sex was mostly gay? not that it matters. I seem to recall the dialoge as reasonably funny.
@JerryCoffin Was papal infallability "declared the notion to be the work of the devil"? my google fu is escaping me.
@CaptainGiraffe Right--they'd brought up the idea previously, and the pope of the time was (apparently quite strongly) opposed. I'm not sure I can help much with Googling though--I don't remember where I read this.
> In his book on the First Vatican Council, August Hasler wrote, "John XXII didn't want to hear about his own infallibility. He viewed it as an improper restriction of his rights as a sovereign, and in the bull Qui quorundam (1324) condemned the Franciscan doctrine of papal infallibility as the work of the devil."
@JerryCoffin That's about the root. The different binyanim (qal, nifal, piel, etc in Luc's "even better lexicon view" page) ("conjugations") have slightly different meanings.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Right--but I probably didn't notice (or at least pay attention to) that as a teenager (which I'm pretty sure was when I formulated the notion). I was contrary enough to be happy with finding it as having a somewhat different meaning that I probably just went with it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes For a while, I was rather set on proving (at least to myself) that nearly everything mandated by the Bible was at least a little (and often entirely) different than I'd been taught in Catholic school. For years, we'd been taught that premarital sex was simply a sin. No ifs, ands or buts. Then I actually read the Bible, and found that what it says is actually that if a boy and girl who aren't married or engaged to anybody else have sex, then they're engaged to each other.
Nothing at all about it's being a sin, nor even that it should be viewed as a lesser form of getting engaged. Basically a fairly normal and respectable thing, as far as the Bible cared.
@sehe At the same time, they (and, in fairness nearly all other Christians) seem to have no difficulty at all ignoring lots of parts they don't particularly like. At times I've rather enjoyed telling people about how my older brother died without having children, and his widow was hot, so I got her to move in and have sex with me, and have some kids together (only they're his kids, not mine). Absolutely what the Bible says I need to do, but Christians seem to find it appalling.
@LoïcFaure-Lacroix Because that's what God commands! Honestly, it basically had to do with inheritance--the oldest son inherited more than the younger sons. If an oldest brother died without children, then the first son the younger brother had with the oldest son's widow received the larger inheritance.