
Meanwhile, every government building in India:
Meanwhile, every government building in India:
disroot and autistici have been providing decentralised communication services (like email) free of cost for many years. They are both run by activists and survive on donations, and they don’t spy on you or get any money from your data. Also they run freedom-respecting software, so all their code is publicly auditable.
“Respect your elders, because they are always right”
Post by stimmyabby:
Sometimes people use “respect” to mean “treating someone like a person” and sometimes they use “respect” to mean “treating someone like an authority”
and sometimes people who are used to being treated like an authority say “if you won’t respect me I won’t respect you” and they mean “if you won’t treat me like an authority I won’t treat you like a person”
and they think they’re being fair but they aren’t, and it’s not okay.
End of post.
Reply post by do-as-youre-told:
This is so well put I am stunned
Source: flyingpurplepizzaeater
End of reply post.
There’s paperd.ink introduced some years back at IndiaFOSS
Just don’t want to create an account there, that’s why I asked :)
Could you ask them about the genocide in Palestine? Wanted to see if either of the LLMs accepts it as a genocide.
Never ask a USAian LLM what is happening in Palestine since 1948.
As a person from India I get ThankYouModiji vibes
P.S. we know how you feel, and how you will feel in a few years from now :(
That would be cool. I could finally sync my Paper notes
Since you asked for windows, etcher can do multiple drives as of v1.4.3
https://blog.balena.io/etcher-now-with-multi-write-and-compute-module-support/
Don’t kids get free breakfast and lunch in US schools? Asking because all government funded schools do that in the country I live, and there are 1,186,570 government funded schools as of 2018 data.
Maybe the OP meant the wayback machine?
In my place it’s illegal but apparently no one cares and that’s how parents and teachers show their “love” towards their child.
Source:
Where I live, it’s called arranged marriage, a form of forced marriage where parents choose who their child should live with. It’s more common than many people would imagine, especially among women, girls and other non-male genders, and 93% of married Indians had an arranged marriage (data from a 2018 survey, source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-59530706)
In many regions in India, almost all kinds of Christians wear that in church
assuming you tried to update the repos, your repo mirror might be outdated