I've been writing a ton of new code for the Gibberfish Management Portal, which lets users deploy and manage their Nextcloud servers in a browser without having to touch the command line. Not so long ago, we had the user interface 100% translated into 9 languages, but with all the new content, it's dropped to around 50%. I know there are people in my Aspects who are fluent in pretty much every relevant language, so I'm asking if a few of you would be willing to help out. We're not talking about translating a novel, just a few dozen sentences.
We use WebTranslateIt, which is the same platform Diaspora* uses, so if you've contributed to D* you won't even need to sign up for a new account. You should be able to add yourself to the project here: https://webtranslateit.com/en/projects/17646-Gibberfish-Management-Portal. If that doesn't work, PM me with your email address and I'll send you an invitation.
I just confirmed a trick to get a snake that's biting you to let go: put warm water on it's face. I've heard that if the situation is urgent, vodka works faster.
I just made up two 5lb spawn bags of maple sawdust with a dash of coffee grounds using proper gusseted, filter-patched polypropylene bags. Unfortunately I have a tiny pressure cooker, so tomorrow I'll have to sterilize them one at a time for about 2.5 hours each... but they should both be cooled down and ready by Sunday to be mixed with my 6 pint jars of colonized birdseed. I'll post pics tomorrow.
So in a hypothetical situation where there's a majority on the SCOTUS that votes as a partisan bloc, what power (if any) do the other Justices have? Is there procedural shit they can fuck with, or something?
Yesterday an update to Samba 3.8 totally fucked the chips. I had to spend all day sodding about with it to isolate the wanky components, then I tossed it off on winbindd so it wouldn't be shagged for a week. I'm running out of motherboards to bodge this with.
“I really respected what Nancy said last night about bipartisanship and getting together and uniting. She used the word uniting and she used the bipartisanship statement which is so important because that’s what we should be doing. So we can look at us, they can look at us. Then we can look at them and it’ll go back and forth and it’ll probably be very good for me politically. I could see it being extremely good politically because I think I‘m better at that game than they are actually, but we’ll find out. I mean, you know, we’ll find out or we can work together. You can’t do them simultaneous, by the way.”