lilypad

joined 2 years ago
[–] lilypad@hexbear.net 7 points 2 years ago (1 children)

i-get-it nu skjønner æ. Æ tok feil da æ flytta hit. Kor mye e en hybel på svalbard? Altså, SP har ikkje drept alle ulvan så æ må jo lære mæ å skyte uansett, og da burde æ bo en plass der det e ordentlig behov for mine nylærte skytingsskills.

[–] lilypad@hexbear.net 9 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (5 children)

De sa «Du burde flytte sørover». De sa «Det er varmere og mildere der», ja vel nu e æ faen mæ fanga på denne forbanna togstasjonen! Fette faen i helvette æ burde ha flytta til føkkings gran canaria eller nokka.

-- some nordlending whose tired of the cold, probably.

[–] lilypad@hexbear.net 4 points 2 years ago

i see, your pagh is strong

[–] lilypad@hexbear.net 30 points 2 years ago

Uhhh yeah id like some materialism with a side of dialectics. But no Marx! If its Marx or his dialectical materialism, i send it back!

[–] lilypad@hexbear.net 40 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

Theres a url, say peepee.com. So far this is the routing portion of the url that says how to find the web server, basically saying "ask .com how to find peepee", and that gives us the ip address of the server.

Everything that comes after that, is information for the server itself. So to navigate to a resource, say poopoo, that lives on the server, they would navigate to peepee.com/poopoo.

But sometimes you want to navigate to that resource and also communicate some bit of information to the server, say a login token so the server knows who is accessing that resource. This is communicated via a URL parameter, and looks like ?userid=abcd1234, or in the full url: peepee.com/poopoo?userid=abcd1234. So the user is still accessing the same resource, but has provided additional metadata to the server.

These parameters can be abused to identify who knows who and who communicates with who by attaching a tracking id parameter to the URL, so when you share a link it includes that tracking parameter and anyone who clicks on it, well now the server knows that the originator of the tracking ID (well, the first person to be assigned it) shared it with this other person. This can be combined with other collected info to build a map and social graph of actual people, e.g. we know dave is at this ip, and jane is at this other ip, and we put a tracking parameter in daves url and we saw jane use that same tracking parameter in her url, so we know that dave shared this url with jane.

So to answer your question, a canonical link is a link to a resource without the unneeded url parameters.

[–] lilypad@hexbear.net 5 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

Thanks :) id be surprised if she meant to speak to a trans experience but fuck that art is meant to be interpreted not dictated/prescribed

[–] lilypad@hexbear.net 4 points 2 years ago

Since no ones mentioned it yet, Super Tux Kart should work. Its available cross platform, and you can host LAN games if Im remembering right, and it should be fun for 30 minutes of pick up play.

[–] lilypad@hexbear.net 2 points 2 years ago

I really liked The Wandering Village, which I think is from this last year. It didnt do anything particularly wow but i lost so many hours to it, its just really fun and sweet.

[–] lilypad@hexbear.net 13 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Heia Catra!

Just want to say that regardless of your position resource wise, this is scary. We live in a very cisnormative world that punishes being trans, regardless of how much you make or how many resources are available to you. As others have said, you are just as brave!

[–] lilypad@hexbear.net 13 points 2 years ago

Well come out, ye Kat as trans
Come out and tear down cis het plans
Break the chains that bind and keep cisnormati-vity

Show em how there is no chance
That you will turn down this dance
With the gender faeries from the towns and ci-i-tys

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