Developers, developers, developers, developers

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Without realising the "correct" pronunciation I've stuck with pronouncing GIF as 'jiff'. I think it's easier to say in speech, though some might not agree with me on that.

Wait Zack you're telling me that I'm the only one who pronounces "imgur" as image-ur? ;O; (Imager is probably my closest answer)
 
This is the only thing I pronounce as "jiff"

[PokeCommunity.com] Developers, developers, developers, developers
 
loljif

Wait Zack you're telling me that I'm the only one who pronounces "imgur" as image-ur? ;O; (Imager is probably my closest answer)
Image-ur is how it's supposed to be pronounced (according to their FAQ), so I pronounce it that way too. I know some people in real life that say "im-gurr" though and it annoys me more than giff/jiff.
 
https://www.w3.org/TR/PNG-Introduction.html
I like, how the official pronounciation of PNG is "ping". Yet, people still pronounce it "pee-en-gee" {XD}
That's just stupid. PNG is an initialism, most initialism are pronounced by saying the letters, like FBI, OEM, and BBC.

I don't know why people things think they just can re-write english language rules.
 
J-Peg, P-N-G, Bitmap, Dib, Raw, P-S-D, Rar, Zip, Seven-Z, G-Z, X-Z, B-Z-Two, Tar, Doc-X, Ex-El-Ess, now this is just me but sometimes I say Power-Pt, without a vowel. :P
 
I dunno why, but the thought of getting the lower-end model Mac Mini popped into my head. I've never owned a Macintosh computer in my life, so it'd be a new chapter for sure if I got one. However, at the same time, I'm still considering getting parts to build a PC for a replacement of my "dead" desktop.

I *just* got one last week. Been using the iPhone for a while, liking my experience with it, been tempted to dive completely into the Apple exosphere for a while, then MicroCenter had the lowest end Mac Mini for $399. It's not that bad at all. My only complaint so far is that it has a HDD instead of an SSD (I'm spoiled okay), but I intend to fix that tomorrow morning. Cloning the HDD to SSD was quick and simple, doesn't even require installing additional software. the only reason I haven't swapped it out already is that I don't have a T6 security bit.

UPDATE, SSD migration successful. Wasn't overly hard to replace the HDD, other than needing a T6 security bit, and having to completely gut the computer to get to the HDD.
 
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I'd like a $700 laptop and my Samsung Galaxy Reverb back. This Intel Celeron N2815 is killing me, and I have no phone, which means not only no phone/text but also no mobile music, no checking things without a PC, and more... ugh. I have to fix my digital life.
 
I've been wanting to set one of those up myself, but I'm too broke for hosting haha. It's something that's on my to-do list though for once I get a new job.
I actually self-host mine! I have a couple of domains that point to my assigned IP from my ISP and have a port (not 80) opened up so that I can access it away from home.
 
That'd be a smart way of going about it. I'd have to have a decent upload speed, first, or else my ping would be slow as heck having it relay from where I am to home, then to the IRC server. And if I'm on my phone, pings of 2000ms+ aren't uncommon when it's busy.
How bad is your upload? o_O

Usually IRC doesn't take up a lot of bandwidth, so I'd imagine it's the same way for a ZNC bouncer.
 
Makes me have all the more anticipation for Google Fiber. Dat 1000/1000. Now who's going to be slower? The servers, that's right. Read 'em and weep.

Funny how PC is already slow as it is, God help me with fibre accessing this thing lawl
 
Makes me have all the more anticipation for Google Fiber. Dat 1000/1000. Now who's going to be slower? The servers, that's right. Read 'em and weep.

Funny how PC is already slow as it is, God help me with fibre accessing this thing lawl
I honestly want Google Fiber down here where I live. I would take extreme advantage of the $300 one-time fee for unlimited basic service and use that on my server as a dedicated line (better than unstable Verizon FiOS wifi + power outages at times). Although the speeds aren't that great, being able to pay $300 for basic high-speed internet is a steal, especially for those that cannot afford a normal internet plan.
 
I seriously just had to cut the cable on that laptop of mine. It was choking so bad that I sat there having the contents of the task manager Window rudely flash before my eyes... it was printing the window thrice per whole second. I wasn't even doing anything intensive, just regular stuff open and my YouTube on this Arch Linux boot here! I don't want to use that laptop anymore.

I like how things on this Core i5 with Arch on a USB stick don't ride like a Jeep on gravel... gah. Crappy hardware is a shaky experience.

That laptop had a mobile Celeron with no way to reimage Windows on it (complains about ACPI compliancy). If I can't shift it over to my mother when I get a new PC (this one belongs to a client who is apparently poor) then I'll happily trash it.
 
When I was a little kid dealing in pre-Y2K secondhand PCs, I still hated Macs. I thought the ancient Apple IIs and the like were fugly and I thought the OS9 iMacs were just icky. I had such a thing for the modularity IBMs PCs had, believe me. ThinkEverything.
 
While Unicode sporting corporate-bought emoticons is all great and wonderful, I don't think it's fair. Unicode is supposedly a specification - a standard that everyone follows - and having money shouldn't entitle you to dictate the whims of what others have to support. Be it developers, users, or what.

@Zach I don't see any of those emoticons on Arch Linux. Probably wouldn't even see them on #!. I have a hunch the Linux dev community may feel similar to how I do, eh?

I do like how Font Awesome gets custom TTF work done without buying out the specification, though. Kudos to them.
 
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