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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)IN
Posts
136
Comments
1,010
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Your generated answer contains no relevant information. You asked the bullshit machine incorrectly, as from the community it should be clear that OP is looking for a Linux related theme, and from the image it should be clear it's a wm or de. Not a terminal. Not a Google Slide (wtf) or whatever.

    The only slightly relevant part was listing GNOME-Look and KDE Store.

    I'm not a luddite, this current AI technology is a nice and interesting tool, but please don't bring it here this way. We are humans discussing a topic, we don't need this off-putting and irrelevant wall of text. You gain nothing, we gain nothing, no VC fund behind lemmy, there is no incentive to generate content above all. Your karma means nothing, it's only point is sorting comments in a thread.

  • If OP would be interested in an AI generated answer, they would just type the question there. It's not something only you can do.

    And it doesn't even answer the question, it sounds like the out of touch answers on microsoft support forum, why did you copied it here. You haven't even read it? This is one of the worst usecase of an LLM I have ever seen.

  • It wasn't really hard to find the source and some background about this map, I literally typed only "family types in europe map" in ddg, and found some more info:

    An old reddit thread with some interesting related discussion

    Full resolution uncropped map:

    Source of the map is this opinion article: https://archive.nytimes.com/opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/07/17/family-ties-3/

    Research conducted in 2007 [6] paints a pretty strange, and surprisingly tenacious, set of borders across Western Europe. Its subject? “An often overlooked institution, the family”: some academics had “noted strong patterns of family structure, with clear regional variations and persistence over time and linked them to significant social and economic outcomes.”

    The research considered family types based on two criteria. One, the relationship between parents and children. If children flee the nest at an early age, the family type can be said to be “liberal.” If they stay at home and under the authority of their parents long into adulthood, even after having married themselves, the relationship can be classified as “authoritarian.” Second criterion: the relationship among siblings. If they are treated equally (in inheritance law, for example), the relationship is classified as “equal,” but if one child is favored (the firstborn son, say), the relationship is “unequal.”

    Combining the criteria results in five distinct family types:

    • The “absolute nuclear” family type is both liberal and unequal. Children are totally emancipated, forming independent families of their own. The inheritance usually goes to one child, often a son.
    • The “egalitarian nuclear” family type is both liberal and equal. Children are as emancipated and independent as in the previous type, but equal division of the inheritance encourages stronger parent-children relations before the passing of the parents.
    • The “stem” family type is both authoritarian and unequal. Several generations live under one roof, with one child marrying to continue the line. The other children remain unmarried at home, or leave to get married.
    • The “incomplete stem” family is as above, but with slightly more equal inheritance rules — an intermediate with the last family type.
    • The “communitarian” family is both authoritarian and equal. All sons can marry and bring their wives into the ancestral home. The family inheritance is divided equitably among all children.

    According to the researchers, these five family types could help explain the regional disparities in family size, education and wealth across Western Europe. Interestingly, the distribution of the types is almost completely at odds with the modern borders of Europe.

    So the "legend" in the post is not exactly the same as the one from the research.

  • 1.3 W is around 1 kWh per month. I checked on local electric company's website, that's around 0.2 USD per year here. Prices may be diffferent wildly worldwide, but we are definitely speaking about a less than 10 USD difference yearly.

  • Its original idea is actually interesting. Influencers always share perfectly composed scenes of their life, so it seems like they are always traveling, always doing something interesting. This app asks you at random times to please share what you are actually doing at that moment, it sends a notification when you should share, it has a window of some minutes to take a photo. You never know when the next bereal notification will show up. You can be sure, if someone always shares something interesting from their life constantly is not just faking it, it's actually real.

    I never used it, but some of my friends do, so this is based on their explanations.

  • You should assume that whatever you upload to the internet without encryption is public. Bereal was always advertised as a tool for sharing your life with others, so this isn't unexpected for me. The only misleading part is that if you share with friends only, it's not just your friends, but also the service provider, so you should assume that it may leak. I never used bereal so I'm not familiar with its features, some of my friends use it and I just heard about it from them. From their description it didn't sound as an app where you should expect privacy.

    Is Lemmy a privacy nightmare? No, because you know that everything is public here, admins can even see your DMs.

    Do not share private data on the public internet

  • There are different communities for answers like that, for general techsupport. Maybe OP asked it in a wrong place, but if it's already here, and does not sound blatantly oftopic it should be answered in the spirit of the community.

    And the answer was also wrong, OP asked how to save as inverted, not how to open inverted.

  • People are different, different people like different things, and they care about different features of a device.

    I never had any apple device, but I help a lot other people with iphones and macs, and I have to tell you they are just devices. I'm familiar with their features, but I don't care, this whole thing is only about you. If you want an iphone buy one. If you don't want one, just move on, life is too short for getting mad about unnecessary thing like this.

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    Architecture @lemmy.world

    Eight unusual skyscrapers set to transform the skyline of Tirana

    Sid Meier's Civilization - old community @lemm.ee

    Sid Meier's Civilization VII - Official Launch Trailer

    Sid Meier's Civilization - old community @lemm.ee

    Civilization VII gets a mixed reception on Steam, Firaxis say they're listening and put up a small roadmap

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    Civilization VII review: A major overhaul solves Civ’s oldest problems

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    Loops became Open Source!

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    First Look: Friedrich | Civilization VII

    Sid Meier's Civilization - old community @lemm.ee

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    retrocomputing @lemmy.sdf.org

    Why We Didn’t Take Screen Grabs in the 1980s

    Sid Meier's Civilization - old community @lemm.ee

    First Look: José Rizal | Civilization VII

    Sid Meier's Civilization - old community @lemm.ee

    Civilization VII preview: The most complete package since IV

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    Creepy Wikipedia @lemmy.world

    Ian Watkins - frontman of the rock band Lostprophets. Sentenced to 29 years in prison in 2013 for sexual assault of young children and infants, possession of "extreme" child and animal pornography

    [MIGRATED TO DIFFERENT INSTANCE CHECK PIN POST] Internet is Beautiful @lemm.ee

    Any Map Puzzle - tile puzzles of every place in the world

    Sid Meier's Civilization - old community @lemm.ee

    First Look: Ben Franklin | Civilization VII

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    Sid Meier's Civilization - old community @lemm.ee

    Civilization VII Main Theme | Christopher Tin - "Live Gloriously"