I mean Rust is definitely known for long compilation times but yeah otherwise I am not sure how any of this is Rust-specific. Maybe by "doesn't do what you tell it to do" they mean the borrow checker and strict compile time checks...?
4k bookmarks atm. Accumulated over multiple decades. I don't dare look at some parts of my bookmarks, but they are still useful; I have folders I refer to regularly, and doing a bookmark search with * in Firefox helps me find a lot of things I want to return to.
Nice to look at. Disambiguates commonly confused characters (l, 1, I; 0, O).
A lot of South Asian food is naturally vegetarian or vegan. I make chana masala and lentil dahl a fair amount. Lots of flavour from the spices—there's no need for meat.
I also like scrambled tofu, which you can season any way you like. I tend to put curry seasoning on it.
Avocado toast too, but that's infrequent because avocados are expensive.
If you've never made creamy harissa butter beans I highly recommend it. One of the nicest vegan recipes I've made. If you're not keen on spice, make sure to get mild harissa, as the spicy harissa gets quite spicy, speaking as someone who enjoys spice.
Generally I like any tofu dish. Tofu is often meant to accompany meats (traditionally at least) but I find that a lot of tofu dishes that traditionally have meat, work very well without the meat. My go-to lazy lunch is boiling some water with stock cubes and chucking in noodles, medium-firm tofu, a vegetable of my choice, and chilli crisp.
If you want to learn more then do LFS. I don't think Gentoo teaches you much more than a manual Arch install. But very few daily drive LFS. It's hardly practical. Gentoo is daily drivable but if you don't care about compiling all your own packages then I don't think it's for you.
I'd say just do LFS on an old laptop or a VM.
Plenty of people use git hosting to host non-code, like documentation, books written in markdown/LaTeX, etc. I personally use git to maintain a few personal wikis.
Different git forges will have different rules about what content they allow. GitHub definitely allows non-code. I've seen Codeberg repos be used for non-code too. Codeberg's only requirement is that you only host free (as in freedom) content, so I suppose for non-code that means using an appropriate CC licence for example. I can't imagine any of the popular git hosting sites taking issue with someone hosting their book, unless you're hosting, like, the whole of Wikipedia or something.
That's a pretty misleading headline. The news article is about a cool art installation, in which an artist has used a deceased composer's DNA to produce electrical signals that are interpreted as music. Still cool, but it's not "composing music" in the same sense as the alive musician was composing music.
I like my memes to come with a bibliography.
Learn how to take a screenshot
Part of the joke is that it looks like a snapchat story, hence the photo
Jerk your buddy off for him since he can't do that right now
I don't think there is a "dead giveaway". Plenty of kids can pass as adults online and plenty of adults seem like kids online. And sometimes with stuff like word usage/grammar/etc you can't tell if it's a child or someone who doesn't speak English very well or maybe an English-speaking adult who happens to type like that. There's a lot of different people in the world.
Do you have the skills to self-host? If so, you can host any number of cloud storage services: Nextcloud, Immich, Cryptpad. You could even host a Forgejo instance (the software Codeberg runs on) although it's really not intended for storing the kind of images you're talking about.
I am guessing, though, that you are probably not a very technical person, and self-hosting might be out of the question for you. In which case unfortunately your options are a fair bit more limited. There are free hosted Nextcloud instances—Disroot hosts one. Or you could go with something like Proton Drive. If you're open to proprietary options then there's several very widely used options like Dropbox, Google Drive, Mediafire, etc. But if you're posting here, you probably don't want those.