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00:00 - 13:0013:00 - 00:00

00:05
@DavidBuck Was the rule further relaxed?
@Andreas Nope. That was active today as it received an NAA.
@Andreas The question was active today. You can see the last activity at the top of the post.
Ideally the request would have (NATO), but not required.
@DavidBuck Oh. The last activity I could see in the log was the closing
@IanCampbell No reason to invoke article 5 now.
@Andreas If there's an answer that's been deleted, the question may be "active", but with no visible activity to those with < 10k rep. The "Active" date/time at the top of the page should, however, show a recent date as the active date. Normally clicking on that date/time will take you to what was changed, but if it's something that you can't normally see, it will just take you back to the question.
00:10
@IanCampbell That's what I did see, so I checked the log to find out what triggered the new activity.
@Makyen Aha. It doesn't take me anywhere, so yeah, I must lack the reputation.
Case resolved. :)
@Andreas Also, and I've just checked, closure doesn't change the Active date.
@Andreas it shows a "tool-tip" when hovering over "Active today": 2020-07-25 21:08:47Z
@DavidBuck @Vickel :)
00:59
@KenWhite Did someone just upvote that?
@Andreas It's closed, and has a score of -1.
@KenWhite Yeah, but it went from -2 to -1.
@ChristopherMoore Already posted
sorry bout that
@Andreas Not according to the score. It says it has 1 downvote, no upvotes. That's a score of -1. It's possible someone downvoted and then changed their mind and retracted that vote, though.
01:14
@KenWhite Oki. Thanks. Excuse my lack of privileges to view the vote count.
@Makyen Njah... I need a userscript manager first...
@Andreas Not a problem. :-) You'll get there.
I'm not too far from 1000 reputation anyway. ;)
@Andreas That sounds like a solvable problem.
01:23
@Makyen Not when there's a lazy keyword in front of the field, and nothing asks for the value...
@Andreas Personally, I see lazy choice is to have a userscript manger. A large portion of having usercripts is to make it such that you have to put out less effort and get more benefit from your time. Sure, you have to invest some time up front, but it works out in the medium term.
I will leave this relevant xkcd here xkcd.com/1205
Chat: "you have been mentioned in SOCVR"
Me: "...where? I don't see a highlight."
Chat: "In May"
Me: "whaaa...oh, Makyen's a mod now, and can edit messages from two months ago :D"
Am I allowed to flag-pls for NAA on a "thanks for the help" answer by the OP, on a question which I left an answer for?
@Andreas is there a reason you can't flag it yourself?
01:38
@RyanM mhm, ok. I already did flag it, so a "no", then.
So generally additional NAA flags don't help anything
flag-pls requests are only useful in cases where you can't flag it yourself, like if you're out of votes or your previous flag was incorrectly cleared via the queue
Njah, 6 gets it deleted, but yeah, there's probably not much point in being quick with it.
or for spam/abuse where 6 flags deletes (this isn't true of the other flags)
@RyanM mhm, ok.
I thought 6 NAAs got it deleted too.
I'm pretty sure it just makes it take more "Looks OK"s to kick out of the queue
01:41
@Makyen Yeah, but it's even more lazy to just ask others in the chat to figure it out... (that sounds a bit worse than I'd want it to)
@Andreas That takes so much longer for everyone, including you :-p
@Andreas Nah... that takes more effort than a single click.
Ok, then. :P
Someone has seen it before.
@RyanM Ooops. I guess I should have edited out the reply part. :) I'm sorry about that. Being able to edit old messages is a significant perk. As for the edit: I'd expected to link that message and the ones following it for @Andreas as a description of the userscript manager options, but they declared a lack of interested in installing a userscript manager. The edit was to make it a bit more clear with only the first message seen.
@Makyen how's the job going?
01:51
@Makyen Haha, no worries, I'm not actually bothered by an errant reply. If anything, I was amused and expressing my amusement :-) I assumed that was your intention
@AnnZen Busy. I'm still getting the hang of it. :)
And bouncing between keeping up with the other responsibilities I already had.
@Makyen I've already read all those messages. I don't lack the interest. I'm just lazy energetic. ;)
Speaking of flag-pls my NAA flag for stackoverflow.com/questions/57316083/… was rejected. What should I do?
@ChristopherMoore that...is a very subtle NAA
I almost told you it wasn't actually NAA, but then I saw it
Yeah it's understandable that a reviewer wouldn't have noticed that.
02:00
With that sort of NAA, you almost always want to comment on the post noting that it's a reply to another answer, and probably link the answer it's in reply to
Okay is that something I should still do? I can't flag it again.
Thanks to someone. Saw it got deleted and made a comment.
@ChristopherMoore If something isn't obvious, use a custom mod-flag. That one looks like an answer. It takes really looking at the question, the OP's self answer and that answer to see that it's really a comment on the OP's answer.
@Makyen Ok I'll keep that in mind
02:16
@Andreas isn't Docker arguably a "software tool commonly used by programmers?"
Tag description: "Docker is a tool to build and run containers. Questions concerning Dockerfiles, operations, and architecture are accepted. Questions about running docker in production may find better responses on
ServerFault (https://serverfault.com/). The docker tag is rarely used alone and is often paired with other tags such as docker-compose and kubernetes."
I take that as a guidance to redirect such questions to ServerFault or SuperUser.
There's also a bunch of "install Docker" questions on the site.
@NobodyNada Do you think I should retract my flag and request?
02:38
@Andreas I'm not personally going to close-vote, as the tag wiki says such questions "may find better responses on SF" rather than "are off-topic for Stack Overflow" -- but it's up to you and whoever else reviews your request.
@NobodyNada Ok.
@Andreas i mean...it was R/A before the grace period too
@NobodyNada Heh? How's that rude? I can't see any Johnny in there, so it's not---directed at ---anyone the poster themselves. The account is named "shutupjohnny".
@NobodyNada I should flag requirement lists with nothing but the requirement list, for R/A. Undo has a point, but R/A requires a moderator review, doesn't it? Last paragraph in Undo's answer is of importance too.
If a post contains no meaningful content at all, general consensus is that an R/A flag is acceptable
@NobodyNada mhm, ok. :)
6 R/A flags will instantly delete a post without requiring moderator intervention, and they also feed the post into SpamRam which will eventually learn to block that content/IP address after repeated offenses
I don't know how I'd forgotten that. :O I thought only NAA and spam did that.
03:11
NAA flags, on the other hand, go through the review queues and/or mod queues, and they are considered much lower-priority so it takes much longer to delete the post
Thanks. Now I've been refilled with curation knowledge.
np :) One more important thing: if the post contains even an attempt at meaningful communication, or if the user has ever made positive contributions elsewhere on SE, standard flags like NAA should be used instead of spam/abusive
It's much more likely to be an honest mistake than malicious/trolling, so the consequences of an R/A flag are overly harsh
Of course. I tend to check that. :)
@Andreas NAA flags don't feed into SpamRam AFAIK
Doesn't seem so, from the posts you linked to.
03:21
@Andreas I don't believe that's the case, but I don't have a direct source. I don't see where the posts I link imply otherwise; Undo's post states "people here should use rude/abusive flags [...] this feeds signal to SpamRam" implying that NAA flags do not feed signal to SpamRam.
@NobodyNada Yeah, exactly. "Doesn't seem so", as in "Doesn't seem like that", or "Doesn't seem like NAA flags are fed into SpamRam". ;)
@NobodyNada No, they do not.
@Andreas "Doesn't seem like NAA flags are fed into SpamRam"
@NobodyNada mhm?
03:38
@Andreas Ah, nevermind. I misread your clarification as a request for me to clarify :)
ninja'd
03:57
Watermark? Protecting it from copyright infringement?
 
1 hour later…
05:26
@halfer It takes a lot of practice to get up to Bhargav's speed in handling flags. Some of the other experienced mods can do it, but... it's not common, and it's not what you can expect. Don't take Bhargav's stats to be something you can generalize.
 
1 hour later…
06:44
@AdrianMole Really? How old?
@CodyGray I found it very impressive. I've had complicated NAA flag marked helpful. Posts that took me a lot more than minutes to read and understand. I wish I was that bright and fast myself.
Uhh, yeah, I don't think that's true at all, @AdrianMole. Welsh is a Brittonic language in the Celtic family. Danish is a North-Germanic language (like all Nordic and Scandinavian languages).
@Scratte Ho hum! Subtle humour lost again...
@AdrianMole No.. not really. I found it funny. If we go back 50K years, we were all only using the same overall sounds :D
I've lost my ø too now :( Along with g and h..
@CodyGray Humanity needed a lot of time to find out that there is such a thing as speed of light. I am not sure that Bhargav is not working like Pratcehtts Death, i.e. just making the time needed for doing something - or forgetting to make time pass while being focused on something. Often I have attempted to flag something fast enough before it got deleted by Bhargav....
@RobertSsupportsMonicaCellio These requests have a typo in cv-pls and have not been binned: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/50034214#50034214 and chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/50033614#50033614
08:22
@CodyGray not like all Scandinavian languages, you forgot our Finish friends that are not even on indo european branch
@PetterFriberg Technically, Finland is not Scandinavia. But I did say "Nordic", so I was wrong to exclude Finland.
08:35
I think by now most people refeer to the "Scandinavian peninsula" using the word Scandinavia but yes if not you would be technically correct :)
Scandinavia is a cultural term
Scandinavia is a very confusing word indeed. "..the term Scandinavia is sometimes used as a synonym or near-synonym for Nordic countries"
It was but by now I see it used by people as a geografical term
I would have never placed Greenland in that term myself, so that came as a bit of a surprise.
Given that it's a territory of the Kingdom of Denmark, it seems odd not to include it
08:42
"Scandinavian languages" is a well-defined linguistic term anyway, and basically means anything descended from Old Norse (Norröna)
What @tripleee said. Except, what is Norröna? I've not heard that term. Is that Norse in Faroese? Or Finnish?
@CodyGray The Danish Virgin Islands used to be Danish too, but I do not think they were ever included.
it's the Swedish term; to the extent that we know, the Vikings didn't have a specific term for their own language so this is a (vaguely) modern term anyway
You don't think Greenland is culturally Scandinavian?
dansk/dวซnsk tunga
@CodyGray No. I don't. I think they were heavily influenced (not really to the better), but they have their own unique culture.
08:46
Greenland is obviously a mix; there's Dansih culture especially in government etc, but also of course the native local culture
I studied Eskimo culture and religion for 3 months in school, and found no real reason to think they are the same culture. Then at some point the Danes showed up and made a mess of everything. Including forced birth control.
sv.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norrön says the basic original meaning is actually "Norwegian"
@Scratte Inuit, you meant?
@Vega I thought they were the Canadian ones. Eskimo covers Inuit, it seems :)
Okay. Swedish spelling is still weird for me. :-)
@Vega Yes. It's confusing, since "The two main peoples known as "Eskimo" are the Inuit (including the Alaskan Iñupiat peoples, the Greenlandic Inuit, and the mass-grouping Inuit peoples of Canada) and the Yupik (of eastern Siberia[3] and Alaska)."
In danish, we tend to use "eskimo" as referring to the people in Greenland. I guess we're wrong :)
Eskimo is a general term. It's not wrong, just less specific.
> Eskimo has come to be considered offensive...
@Vega That is just one of my pet peeves. I do not see why words are banned just because offensive people use them wrong. Just like Anglo isn't an offensive word in itself :)
> A term used by Mexicans and other non whites in Texas to describe whites in a derogatory fashion.
Weird. I'm from Texas, and I've never heard that used derogatorily.
I mean, anything could be, but that doesn't transform the word into a slur.
09:04
Just realized that a common name Olaf is also on that list :D
That's a common way to create a slur: take a stereotypically common name for the ethnic group, and use it to refer to anyone who appears to be of that ethnicity.
Next up is banning the (<-- argh!) word "the". No one is to use it anymore..
You've heard of E-Prime?
Why ban "the" when you can ban all forms of the verb "to be"?
@CodyGray Yes, that's how "Brian" and "Johnny" were used for years in Denmark. Much to the annoyance of people with the name and to everyone addressing someone with the name, creating raised eyebrows in the supermarket if one asked a friend "What's up Brian? Want a six-pack too?" :D
@Scratte "Brian" and "Johnny" being common names in Denmark? Or stereotypically American names?
09:13
@CodyGray Brian is just a normal name here. Not sure how Johnny entered, but I assume it was from the US. John is from the bible, it I recall correctly. The story is that some fool decided to publish statistics on criminal records by first name. Those two made the top of the list, and the rest was inevitable..
It was exacerbated with marketing advertisements where the clueless fool always had one of those names.
I didn't realize Johnny was a common name in Denmark.
I didn't either until I heard about the statistical report :D
I see. Guess you don't know that many criminals.
I don't :) The top names even changed since the original report.. but they're still being used, like in this article
And, and that contains a topical link to someone being offended about Eskimo ice cream :-)
09:26
It's an awesome ice cream :) There's jelly in the middle.
I don't see that in the picture
@CodyGray I see the confusing. This is the Kæmpe Eskimo. Kæmpe means giant
OK, I definitely had to translate that.
Blackcurrant ice cream
But, dipped in dark Belgian chocolate? That does sound good.
It's not just "Blackcurrant ice cream". There's patches in there with concentrated blackcurrent jelly :) Those highly red areas.
Oh, that's what they translate as "ripple", I guess: "Blackcurrant ice cream stirred with tasty blackcurrant ripple"
I don't know what "ripple" means in this context.
But yeah, I mean, I'd expect blackcurrant ice cream to have, like, bits and pieces of blackcurrants in it.
09:36
Me either :D Never heard "ribble" before. Not even the danish dictionary knows about ribbel
It's basically like ice cream with rødgrød mixed in :-)
Classic Danish
@CodyGray Yes! :) Not a lot of people know about rødgrød though. Even less can pronounce it.
I do OK
But I don't think I'd fool you for a native speaker
I didn't even learn from a native speaker...
10:24
Somebodyโ€™s been having a discussion about my region and culture?
Ooh, did somebody say "discussion about religion"?
Weโ€™re being excluded? Nobody pinged us?
I want to join next time!
I We!
Hei til deg :)
10:30
Hei til deg også. :)
Dette er så hyggelig!
what did I just run into?
@CodyGray T.. Dette gives it away. The adjective as to end in a t :) Contrary to "Denne bog er hyggelig" :)
Alltid kjekt med en samtale på eget språk.
@rene Scandinavian Obsessed Close Vote Reviewers?
10:37
@rene At least I'm not trying to say that R-sounds are worse in Dutch. Not in this room anyway :D
Ha!
@Scratte Wait, really? I do not remember that rule that adjectives have to end in "t".
@CodyGray Your sentence is correct. (Norwegian, at least)
@CodyGray Even so, they do. It depends on the noun. An "et" noun has adjectives ending in t. And it's also why you said "Dette", not "Denne".
@Scratte «et»? Non-gender nouns?
10:40
Oh, yeah, Norwegian is a bit more relaxed about conjugations/declensions, if I remember correctly. That was handy for me.
I always screwed that up in German.
@Andreas Yes. If I recall correctly, while "en" are union words.
So, I'm confused. You're saying it should be "Dette er så hyggeligt!" in Danish?
@Scratte «en gutt, den gutten», «ei jente, den jenta», «et hus, det huset». My dialect doesnโ€™t use the female gender. :)
What is "ei"?
Female «en» (English: «a»/«an»), but also «ikke» (English: «not»), but not in this context.
10:44
I don't remember Female "en".
"en" was both masculine and feminine
@CodyGray Yes :) That is correct :) The noun is sort of implied.. not sure I understand why it's "Dette".
Bokmål: en/ei/et. Nynorsk: ein/ei/eit. (Male/female/no gender)
In this case, there's a dummy subject. It's like saying "It is raining." What is the subject? There isn't one.
I think that't the dialect I cannot understand a spoken word of.
@Scratte Which?
10:49
@Andreas Nynorsk :)
I definitely don't remember "ei" as an article. I have no idea why not. Maybe I just forgot?
@Scratte Thatโ€™s one of the two written (Norwegian) languages (excluding Sami, etc...) in use today, not a dialect. ;) Weโ€™ve more than two dialects. More than a thousand too.
@Andreas I met someone from Bergen once. We had to speak in English :)
Bergen just uses neuter gender for everything... My understanding is it isn't that different.
@Scratte Oh, of course. Itโ€™s very uncomfortable speaking another dialect. I prefer English over some Eastern Norwegian dialect (more closer to what a non-Norwegian has learned), or attempting to speak one of the written languages (thereโ€™s not really any good guidance as to how to pronounce them).
10:53
I'm glad English wins. :-)
@CodyGray :(
But I guess that's only because nobody speaks it correctly, so it's easier to blend in. :-)
@CodyGray It is.. especially with the introduction of words like "updation" :D
@CodyGray Obviously Jens Stoltenberg speaks it correctly.
@Scratte That's not a word. Please check with me first. :-)
The verb form of the noun "update" is... wait for it... "update".
10:56
@CodyGray Hence why Norwegian Icelandic shouldโ€™ve won. We love making new words.
That's the criteria for losing: literally just making up wrong stuff.
mhm, no. Iceland generates new words based on their existing language, when new things and concepts are made.
@CodyGray ..ahh. I see it only works with "upradation" :D
I don't even know what that might mean
People said «husk å save» («remember to save»; correct: «husk å lagre») back when Word didnโ€™t have a Norwegian translation. Some people just donโ€™t care about their own language... Now itโ€™s «chat» instead of «samtale», because social media platforms arenโ€™t properly translating.
10:59
@CodyGray Yes, I got it in an official email once. I think they meant: We've planned an system upgrade.
@Andreas Yeah, they're crazy. They're trying to hold on desperately to Old Norse, so they don't want to just adopt English words for things invented in English-speaking countries. They have to have a committee meet, make up a new Icelandic-sound word, ... It's a whole thing. And pretty silly, if you ask me.
@CodyGray Not silly!
@Scratte I'd be afraid that I was about to be irradiated... "up-rad[i]ation"?
Languages are a very important part of culture and identity. Having your language replaced by another one damages the culture.
I disagree with that
Culture is independent of language
11:01
No?
@Andreas I really really hate it when english terms are translated.. like "på den lange bane" as in "In the long run". We have a perfect phrase for that already: På langt sigt
Oh; yeah.
:50038881 I hear it all the time in sports now. And it's making it's way into office meetings.
Translating idioms is ridiculous, yes
@Scratte Very strange... Sports are among the worst, yeah. Iโ€™m glad Iโ€™ve no interest in sports. «Heโ€™s advancing up the field» โ€”> «han avanserer framover». Wth?
11:04
Also.. "force", but in two syllables to make it sound danish. The actual word would be "styrke"
That depends. If it's energy, then yes. It it's an advantage in an ability, it's "styrke", but they are sometimes a little confusing :)
..please don't remove your messages. No one will understand the transcript.
So atomkraft is correct. While atomstyrke is not a word :)
What would you say instead of "advancing up the field"?
@Scratte I figured asking for that was probably rather stupid, as it couldโ€™ve been «kraft» only in Norwegian. Didnโ€™t know you were gonna answer.
@Scratte : This is a response to my deleted message: «Not «kraft»?»
I have to go.. so "hei til jer" :)
Ha det. :)
@CodyGray «Rykke(r) framover», «fortsetter oppover (banen)», «gjør framskritt», etc.
@AlonEitan Quick request to the room that we need to be careful when downvoting things that appear here. This question has received 6 DV and is now has (presumably) a sympathy upvote.
11:10
Don't comment about votes below the post...
@halfer Not sure I understand, I didn't request to downvote the question
@AlonEitan Apologies, I should have been clearer - that was a request to the room. I replied to your comment so people could see which request I was referring to.
@CodyGray OK, noted
Oh, I see :) NP
@CodyGray «løper oppover», «presser spillet lengre (inn) mot motstanderens mål», «det ble framgang for laget», etc.
OK, yeah, I don't really get it, then. There are lots of ways to say it..
11:15
@CodyGray Jepp. :)
That's just like in English.
So it doesn't make sense to complain about one particular phrasing
@CodyGray «avanserer» is not a Norwegian word. Thatโ€™s my complaint.
Oh, I see
Same with use of English grammar in Norwegian (it would even be incorrect in English ๐Ÿ™„) : «Andreasโ€™ hus». If you pronounce that, is it my house, or is it Andreaโ€™s house? Correct: «Andreas sitt hus» (sin/sine/sitt if the subject ends in «s»).
Yes, that's wrong in English, too. It should be "Andreas's house". Your name is not plural just because it ends in "s".
11:21
Yep.
You can also rewrite it in English using a... what is it, genitive phrase? So, you can say, "the house that belongs to Andreas", but that's substantially more awkward than just saying "Andreas's house" using a possessive
@CodyGray Thatโ€™s generally the preferred way in Nynorsk.
Sometimes, I even see «Perโ€™s hus». ๐Ÿ™„๐Ÿ™„๐Ÿ™„
@Andreas I like that.
@CodyGray ๐Ÿ˜ต
Simpler, clearer, shorter
11:28
@CodyGray mhm, no. ๐Ÿ˜ ๐Ÿ˜ค «Pers hus», thanks.
:)
Oh... wait, you just omit the apostrophe? Gross.
Of course
Do you do "Andreass house"?
I do not like this!
11:29
Andreas sitt hus. Andreas sin bil (=car). Andreas sine ting.
You must like it!
I actually never liked "Andreas his house".
Itโ€™s not «his». English just lacks those words. «His» (English) = «hans» (Norwegian).
It's a self-referential reference. It's essentially the same thing as saying "Andreas his house".
Njah
English lacks those words because they're pointless! :-)
11:34
So now Iโ€™m gonna have to look for pointless English words too?
«Am», «are», «is» is pointless (not the same category, but...). All we need in Norwegian is «er».
They add specificity
But, yeah, conjugations of "to be" are a big mess in English.
Just change prefix or suffix depending on where in the sentence the word appears and what it means
«The» is pretty pointless, when you can just add «en»/«a»/«et» to the end of the words instead. (Just «en» and «et» in my dialect. :) ).
Noooo. I do not like conjugating nouns.
You shouldn't be changing the names of things by adding suffixen!
No, not adding, replacing them
11:39
That's worse!
@CodyGray But then you can drop the word order in sentence. It's a benefit.
@Dharman Pre-Norse did that.
I'm not sure what you mean by "drop the word order"
@CodyGray may I recommend learning Indonesian? It's nearly 100% analytical.
11:43
Oh. Ugh.
One of the few things I dislike about English is that we are not rigorous enough with word order.
@AlonEitan Isn't it a self-duplcate (of a duplicate)? stackoverflow.com/q/63098288/5468463
@CodyGray one of the really interesting things about English though is that it uses Norse word order rather than that of German and Dutch, even though it belongs to same language subfamily as German. Apparently there were so many ESL Vikings living in medieval England that they actually changed English.
@Vega I think you're right! Didn't notice that
@Dharman The first Polish sentence in that first answer is the correct one in Norwegian too, (add «the» to «cinema»), but the third one works as well. The second one is understandable, and gives a meaning, but not correct to use.
Word order in Old Norse is relatively free.
11:47
Do you know how difficult it is for me to think before saying a sentence in English about the order? In Polish I could just think of the word I need in the middle of saying the sentence.
Because, as was discussed, Old Norse conjugates/declines words using grammatical endings.
I even made that mistake when typing the above sentence
@CodyGray You should take a look at pre-Norse.
You aren't supposed to just think of words! You are supposed to think in sentences.
@Andreas As far as I know, the only thing we have of Proto-Norse are runic inscriptions
Ignore this. The English Wikipedia article has much more information.
12:11
Ignore both I shouldnโ€™t underestimate your knowledge.
Isnโ€™t this better asked on SoftwareEngineering?
I don't think it would be a good fit there. It's still too broad and opinion-based.
mhm, ok.
I'm not an expert on SE.SE's scope, though. What am I saying, I barely even understand its scope.
There sure are a lot of abysmally low-quality "machine learning" questions. I guess that's the new PHP.
@Andreas Look, it's already asked there, and seems to have been well-received. What do I know?
12:25
Great. Now seeing posts containing "Stay safe and wash those hands! :)"
@halfer SO is a forum, you know.
@halfer Maybe because they took away the icon to say that?
@CodyGray Yeah, those tags are getting flooded with garbage.
@CodyGray The SE.SE question seems worse written than the one posted here.
I'm not the right moderator to complain to about that :-)
Stay ๐Ÿ— and ๐Ÿงผ๐Ÿงด your ๐Ÿ™ , so ๐Ÿšซ๐Ÿฆ . Check the๐ŸŒก before you get ๐Ÿค’๐Ÿคง๐Ÿค•๐Ÿ˜ต
@halfer Wash those posts
12:34
@Andreas Stay key and soap+lotion your praying, so non-bacteria. Check the thermometer before you get your temperature taken, start sneezing, crack open your skull, and/or end up dizzy/dead.
Have I mentioned before my strong belief that emojis should come with tooltips explaining their meanings? I had to look some of those up.
(It doesn't help that they're basically microscopic on my screen, which is optimized for reading text.)
You need a bigger phone. Iโ€™m thinking of an iPad.
@CodyGray More noise?
This isn't a phone. It's a notebook
You need a foldable notebook.
This one does fold. You can actually bend it all the way around and use it as a tablet, if you wanted, but I don't know why anyone would ever want that. But I have it optimized for displaying text, so I can fit as much of it on the screen as possible. It's like a 13" LCD, which I have set to a 2048x1152 resolution.
It's ok, with the rules that I write a proper answer to the same question now, right?
12:40
You need a bigger one.
The whole point of these things is that they are small and portable. I have a desktop with 4 monitors and a full-size keyboard that I use when I don't need to be portable.
You need a userscript that upscales all emojis.
I'd prefer a userscript that replaces all emojis with text. I bet they have that, actually.
Text describing the emoji, or text interpreting the emojisโ€™ meanings?
I'm going to assume they're the same thing, for the purposes of simplicity.
12:45
Not so simple for the implementation.
๐Ÿ‘ฌโค๏ธโ›”๏ธ๐Ÿ› ๐Ÿ”ฒ
@Andreas Good idea, I am giving them an extra scrub!
@halfer โฌ…๏ธ๐Ÿ‘ค๐Ÿ“โžก๏ธ๐Ÿ‘ฆ๐Ÿป๐Ÿ“ฒ๐Ÿ‘โœ…
I need an emoji menu here!
:D
@CodyGray ๐Ÿ‘“๐Ÿข๐Ÿš›๐Ÿ—‘โœ…โœ…โ™ป๏ธ
12:58
I gave up 3 messages ago.
๐Ÿ‘ฆ๐Ÿปโžก๏ธ๐Ÿ˜ฃ
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