Moved from @Crul@lemmy.world

  • 23 Posts
  • 51 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 5th, 2023

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  • My 2 cents: I have a similar relation with smartphones as yours.

    In my case, what I fear the most is some app getting my contact list and using it to send some kind of “XXX has joined YYY service” notification to all of them. Also, I didn’t like that Google had all the data they wanted, so I ended with 2 smartphones:

    • One de-googled (LineageOS without Google Apps) that I use for calls and trusted apps. This one has my contacts list.
    • One default Android-Google without simcard for those apps that require oficial-Android (mainly banks apps) and any app I’m afraid could mess with the contact list.

    AFAIK I’ve only had one incident because I trusted Telegram too much. There is always non-zero risk, but this works for me.












  • Credit: u/JG_Online and u/UltraWorlds. This is the comment on the original post from reddit:

    Languages are categorized by linguistic families by colours.

    So Spanish and Portugese (both being Romance) are redish shades, similarly other linguistic groups share similar shades indicating these are closely related languages. (this scheme breaks down quite a bit with so many languages but generally it checks out here, if you have some linguistic background)

    The map does not include labels as to no obscure the detail we put into it, so I guess this map is mainly for ppl who already have some linguistic landscape knowledge.

    Area’s which have between 30 to 70% majority are shown as striped.

    Area’s with a population density below 1p/km2 are shown as sparsely populated. This does not mean no one lives there but rather that a single immigrant family can add Korean to the Sahara desert, which is not what this map is about.

    Languages with less than 20,000 speakers in a populated area are not shown. (This mainly to exclude the native american languages that are overwhelmingly outpopulated in states such as NY or CA)

    Linguistic Isolates are shown in various grey shades.

    The friend who helped me with this map is u/UltraWorlds






  • How long would you say it took you before getting a fundamental understanding?

    I would say years, as with any complex activity.

    I’m still forgetting things I learned 3 or even 4 times like how to do a for each loop.

    You can forget in 2 different ways:

    1. Forget how to use something, so you need to look how to do it.
    2. Forget that something exists, so you cannot even look for it because you are not aware it’s a possibility.

    You will forget-1 everything which you don’t use on a daily basis. That’s what internet is for. Forgetting in the 2-nd sense is much more rare and you should do something if that’s the case.

    all of it feels too advanced and I get lost on how to begin

    This is a bias most of us have, you overlook how easy is for you to do things that previously were impossible and focus on how hard are the things you still don’t know how to do. And computing is so complex right now that there always be “infinite” things you don’t know.

    Try showing what you know to someone who doesn’t know how to code and you will get an idea of how much you have learnt :).

    Anyway, I don’t really have good advice :/, just wanted to confirm that what you feel is expected. Good luck!