Also, there’s things like the Mediterranean that is much saltier than the Atlantic, despite plenty of water flowing back and forth. There’s sealife that’s only found in the Med, like the Mediterranean monk seal.
Deebster
New account since lemmyrs.org went down, other @Deebsters are available.
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Bot is back online.
Deebsterto
Technology@lemmy.world•X Users Find Their Real Names Are Being Googled in Israel After Using X Verification Software “Au10tix”English
9·14 days agoAh yes, I see what you mean. OP has posted content from Ten Epstein Revelations You Might Have Missed, which is the article that I see after the Israel/X story.
Deebsterto
Technology@lemmy.world•X Users Find Their Real Names Are Being Googled in Israel After Using X Verification Software “Au10tix”English
122·15 days agoYou scrolled past the (annoying) “read more” button and are now on the next article.
Deebsterto
Tech•Open source devs consider making [bandwidth] hogs pay for every downloadEnglish
1·21 days agoYeah ok, I guess that’s what’s meant.
I’d be interested to know how the patterns changed - perhaps requests moved to IPv6 which made grouping request origins harder, or maybe too many unconnected users were coming from a single IP and getting false positives (leading to bad UX and support requests).
Deebsterto
Tech•Open source devs consider making [bandwidth] hogs pay for every download
3·21 days agoThrottling efforts led to “brownouts” via 429 errors
Does this mean for the (ab)users, or for the repo? If it’s for the bandwidth hogs, then the brownouts are properly a good thing, as it’ll force people to pay attention to these otherwise unmonitored systems.
Also, if it makes the upstream service seem flaky and unreliable, it could convince users to set up the proper caching proxy just for self-interested availability reasons.
I can see some companies happily paying for access, as they’ll think it’s easier than paying someone internally to manage a proxy/mirror, especially as on-prem is unfashionable lately.
Deebsterto
Linux Memes@sopuli.xyz•For users of Bcachefs, sorry your FS creator is currently doing a TempleOSEnglish
5·26 days agoThe Register article: https://www.theregister.com/2026/02/25/bcachefs_creator_ai/
koverstreet’s claims on Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/bcachefs/comments/1rblll1/comment/o6tmlib/
I think maintaining two accounts is sensible as servers/instances die all the time. I’ve got my subscriptions synchronised between this account and one on infosec.pub.
Vogager gives you a baby icon (the new account indicator), which makes you seem very young indeed
Yeah, this is most wholesome and relatable thing I’ve seen on Lemmy for ages
Deebsterto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•People always want their ideal conversation to sound like movie characters, but in reality most people talk as if they're in an interrogation room or how people sound like on police bodycam footage.
4·1 month agoAlso there’s the style of delivery - old acting used to be very exaggerated and hammy, then there’s the kind of flawless but somewhat natural style that OP is talking about, through to today’s more realistic “mumbling” style that everyone complains about.
Bad news on the backbone
I couldn’t scan a single ASNI’m trying to figure out what pronunciation or accent the author uses to have this rhyme. A heavy South African accent, so backbone is more like “berckben”? Pronouncing ASN as “a-sone”?
In the other post, you claim you’d ordered them from Etsy. Is it your Etsy shop? I’m struggling to see how both can be true.
Deebsterto
Cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works•Exposed Moltbook Database Let Anyone Take Control of Any AI Agent on the SiteEnglish
18·2 months agoI had to laugh - that lot have absolutely no clue when it comes to security. Even in a VM I’m not sure I’d trust running Clawdbot (or whatever it’s named this week).
Deebsterto
Mildly Interesting@lemmy.world•What are the metal sticks on aircraft wings for?
541·2 months agoOn a Boeing, they’re zip ties holding them together
Deebsterto
Tolkien, Lord of the Rings (LotR), etc.@lemmy.world•Something that occurred to me while watching Lord of the Rings.
4·2 months agoIt’s a lot quicker than reading it! It’s nearly half a million words, over if you include The Hobbit/Silmarillion.
Someone was claiming that the early chapters (I think it was the Old Forest stuff, after they left the Shire) were purposely written in a dense, slow style to make the reader really feel the weary progress. I don’t think I believe that, but it’s an interesting possibility.
Deebsterto
Star Trek Social Club@startrek.website•I can be considered Trekkie or just a viewer?English
5·2 months agoI’d assume that most people are familiar with the term Trekkie, but would have to use context to figure out Trekker (“you like long walks?”)
Whatever the intention, coining/identifying as a separate term suggests someone taking it quite seriously. I just consider them synonyms.
edit: FYI, this shop is OP’s shop
Found them! This lets me cheat and figure out the ones I couldn’t name (or knew I’d got wrong like Digital Ocean that I thought probably wasn’t Commodore 64).
These are really consistent, do you print them yourself?




























No, you’ve misunderstood, here is a quote from your own source:
It was a reversion that Poettering rejected, the PR stands.