DAD.PRG

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DAD.PRG

DAD.PRG

@code_wizard_uk

I’m a dad, I love retro (especially Atari ST), I build stuff, AI helps me get shit done, and I believe in a thing called love.

Sumali Kasım 2023
133 Sinusundan254 Mga Tagasunod
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DAD.PRG
DAD.PRG@code_wizard_uk·
d-pad.org/viewtopic.php?… So as Twitter isn’t really the best place for this kind of thing I’m doing a little run through PC Zone magazine issues. Thought it might be fun.
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The Cyberpunk Dingo
The Cyberpunk Dingo@cyberpunkdingo·
You have to remember, there's never been a single instance in history where there's been mass Islamic immigration into a nation, where peaceful assimilation has occurred. It'll end up with society radically changing forever, or complete takeover. Both involve violence and civil unrest. We've seen this happen in multiple countries in the past 100 years alone. You already see glimpses of impending change if the course is not reversed in multiple countries. The UK only the other day made news for advising schools to avoid music, dance and art. Left wing female politicians are cosplaying being fully veiled, despite it being a tool of oppression in actual Islamic countries. There's even a trend of gay people moving towards right wing parties because of rather open, increasing homophobia from people coming in en masse from countries where homosexuality often sees brutal punishment. Islam doesn't need a double digit demographic majority to take over a nation. It simply requires everybody else be frozen while it takes over.
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DAD.PRG
DAD.PRG@code_wizard_uk·
@lydiahallie Any chance we could have a Linux version of the desktop app?
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Lydia Hallie ✨
Lydia Hallie ✨@lydiahallie·
Claude Code on desktop lets you select DOM elements directly, much easier than describing which component you want updated! Claude gets the tag, classes, key styles, surrounding HTML, and a cropped screenshot. React apps also get the source file, component name and props
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Leo Kearse - see me on tour! Links in bio
Having worked in the public sector, I can confirm it operates as a mafia. A giant holding pen for mediocre people with mediocre degrees to wear suits and create work for each other so they can steal an ever larger chunk of taxpayers' hard-earned money. Of course they spent £180 million deciding not to build a road tunnel. When I worked in public sector management consultancy, we were tasked with finding efficiencies in the IT department of a large government agency. One man we spoke to had two laptops on his desk. He said one was for forex trading and the other one was to monitor his chicken farm in Ghana. There was no shame as he told us this, no realisation that he was actually being employed to do a job that didn't involve forex trading or managing a chicken farm in Ghana. We were struck by the number of people sitting around doing nothing, even for a public sector organisation. Then we discovered that the man running the IT department also owned an IT recruitment consultancy. Every man he hired into this IT department from his recruitment consultancy put money in his own pocket. So there was a huge incentive for him to just hire as many men as possible to get as rich as possible. Never mind being prosecuted over this - I don't think he actually lost his job. And there's an incentive in the rest of the public sector to hire as many people as possible because the more people you manage, the more important you are, the bigger budget you get, and the greater your salary. (On the plus side, as a management consultant, finding efficiencies in the public sector is a piece of piss.) When you hear about public sector investment, this is money taken from the real economy and given to people to produce very little. This isn't "investment" any more than a bank "invests" in bank robbers. It's not done to make a profit. It holds the real economy back, not just in terms of the tax burden, but also in the huge numbers of workers tied up in this false, public sector Potemkin economy. Those workers should be in the real economy producing something of value. Britain could be a paradise. We could all be rich. There's no need for mass immigration. The workers we need are already here doing nothing, on benefits or in the public sector. We just need to fire everyone in the public sector and scrap all benefits.
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Dr. Maalouf ‏
Dr. Maalouf ‏@realMaalouf·
This was Lebanon in the 1960s, when it was still a Christian country and known as the Paris of the Middle East. Lebanon was created to be a Christian homeland for persecuted Christians in the region. But like naive Westerners today, it decided to be multicultural and include Muslims in the country. Once Muslims became the majority, they started a war to overthrow the Christians who welcomed them, and the country has not known peace ever since. Lebanon is the ultimate example that coexistence between radically different cultures is impossible.
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Reelix
Reelix@Reelix·
Turns out, the person who did the final approval of a change that would make people hate Linux works at Microsoft. I'm sure there's no conflict of interest there - No siree! github.com/systemd/system…
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Hans Mahncke
Hans Mahncke@HansMahncke·
What often gets overlooked is that you don’t need anything close to 51 percent to take control of a country. The mullahs in Iran never had majority backing, but they were the loudest and the most willing to intimidate and threaten. You see a version of this in Europe as well. Green parties rarely break 10 percent, yet they always punch far above their weight by applying relentless pressure and moral blackmail. Add violence and outright coercion into that mix, and it’s obvious the die is cast for Europe.
Gad Saad@GadSaad

This is at 1% of the US population. Are you able to extrapolate to what happens when that number reaches 5%? 10%? 20%? Keep burying your head in the sand.

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Wolf 🐺
Wolf 🐺@WorldByWolf·
No this isn’t Keir Starmer on a visit to North Africa or the Middle East this is him at a school in Britain. Every single one of these children and their families needs to leave. We’ll do it peacefully, humanely, and we’ll compensate them but they cannot stay here.
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Lola Woods 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 🇬🇧
Yup! In my high school, the day after 9/11 all the Muslims were cheering and celebrating. It was the day I realised we have a HUGE problem. Little 15 year old me was bewildered why kids were chanting ‘death to the West’ like demons.
Steve Loftus@LoftusSteve

For a number of years, more than 20 years ago, I worked for a Pakistani owned business and lived in a Muslim dominated area of Manchester. I understand why Nick feels this way, and those railing against it in the name of diversity are ignoring that Islam is aggressively intolerant of other religions. I have many years of personal experience with both immigrant and British born Pakistanis. There was no real difference. Islam is the one true faith and all others are "kafir". It's a far more exclusive religion than others, there is no interest in diversity of faith. You are Muslim, or you are "kafir". This was highlighted to me on the day of 9/11. It was early in the morning, around 9am, and cheers started echoing down the corridors. Word started to spread and they were all grinning and clapping each other on the backs. These were men and women born and raised here for the most part. The owner wheeled in a big CRT TV and 30-40 of them gathered around BBC news laughing and cheering like Pakistan were in the cricket world cup final. It is not hard to see why large public prayers by followers of a religion perceived as hostile to your very existence can feel less like worship and more like an assertion of dominance. I'm sure there are many good, tolerant Muslim people in this country who mix Western ideals with the muslim faith. People that consider themselves British among all else. But I learned that day that there are less than you think.

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Steve Loftus
Steve Loftus@LoftusSteve·
For a number of years, more than 20 years ago, I worked for a Pakistani owned business and lived in a Muslim dominated area of Manchester. I understand why Nick feels this way, and those railing against it in the name of diversity are ignoring that Islam is aggressively intolerant of other religions. I have many years of personal experience with both immigrant and British born Pakistanis. There was no real difference. Islam is the one true faith and all others are "kafir". It's a far more exclusive religion than others, there is no interest in diversity of faith. You are Muslim, or you are "kafir". This was highlighted to me on the day of 9/11. It was early in the morning, around 9am, and cheers started echoing down the corridors. Word started to spread and they were all grinning and clapping each other on the backs. These were men and women born and raised here for the most part. The owner wheeled in a big CRT TV and 30-40 of them gathered around BBC news laughing and cheering like Pakistan were in the cricket world cup final. It is not hard to see why large public prayers by followers of a religion perceived as hostile to your very existence can feel less like worship and more like an assertion of dominance. I'm sure there are many good, tolerant Muslim people in this country who mix Western ideals with the muslim faith. People that consider themselves British among all else. But I learned that day that there are less than you think.
Nick Timothy MP@NJ_Timothy

Too many are too polite to say this. But mass ritual prayer in public places is an act of domination. The adhan - which declares there is no god but allah and Muhammad is his messenger - is, when called in a public place, a declaration of domination. Perform these rituals in mosques if you wish. But they are not welcome in our public places and shared institutions. And given their explicit repudiation of Christianity they certainly do not belong in our churches and cathedrals. I am not suggesting everybody at Trafalgar Square last night is an Islamist. But the domination of public places is straight from the Islamist playbook. Trafalgar Square belongs to all of us. It is a national memorial to our independence and our salvation. Last night was not like a televised football match or a St Patrick’s Day celebration. It was an act of domination and therefore division. It shouldn’t happen again.

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Nile Gardiner
Nile Gardiner@NileGardiner·
In the aftermath of the 9/11 Islamist terrorist attacks, my former boss Margaret Thatcher wrote: "We have harboured those who hated us, tolerated those who threatened us and indulged those who weakened us." How right she was, and her words ring true today, especially in the UK.
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DAD.PRG
DAD.PRG@code_wizard_uk·
@ButtonsNSticks I have no reason to use Windows now all my games work on Linux and everything I want to do just works on Linux.
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ButtonsNSticks
ButtonsNSticks@ButtonsNSticks·
Nope, not going back.
Zac Bowden@zacbowden

BREAKING: Microsoft just announced several major changes to Windows 11 in an effort to win back user trust and evolve the platform into something people will actually want to use over macOS and Linux! It's a huge announcement that addresses Windows 11's biggest problems today, tackling core fundamental issues such as unreliable system performance, UX consistency, AI bloat and general enshittification. Microsoft has confirmed that this year, it WILL be reducing where ads and Copilot appear throughout the system, including in Start, Widgets, Notepad, Photos, and more! File Explorer and Windows Search will be upgraded with improved performance and capabilities that make finding apps and files much faster and easier. The OS will become lighter with less RAM and system utilization at idle, making it smoother to run on low end hardware with limited memory. These improvements will also benefit high-end PCs too. Windows Update will be improved with more granular controls and the ability to postpone updates for longer, along with reducing how often the OS needs to restart to install an update. Microsoft has also confirmed that it's bringing back fan favourite features such as the ability to move the Taskbar! It's also working to update more areas of the system shell with modern WinUI designs, which should make Windows 11 feel more coherent and complete. There's much more in the announcement, and it honestly all sounds too good to be true. Microsoft really is listening to feedback, and is eager to make Windows the BEST desktop OS on the market. More details including when these changes will arrive in the link! windowscentral.com/microsoft/wind…

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Huff
Huff@Huff4Congress·
My grandchildren will likely never be able to visit these buildings, which may or may not still exist, because Germany, France, and the United Kingdom made the conscious decision to replace their native populations with violent retards from the third world. I do not understand.
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Korobochka (コロボ) 🇦🇺✝️
Countless discussions against systemd can now end: It was a US regime infiltration operation that has destroyed Linux.
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