@pgasawa@profjoeyg The essay raises interesting points, and is technically sound. But there's some more non-technical/societal claims/assumptions I don't think are right. Some thoughts
@LakshyAAAgrawal@lateinteraction At Berkeley we are working on an alternate kind of Notebook, which focuses on deployable, parallelized code, which has a focus on reproducibility and so solves many of the versioning problems that aid notebooks.
Tutorial: https://t.co/ZcbbYuXf3N
https://t.co/KopzGXBs80 to try!
@dominic_paragas don't know if you are the right Dominic, but we may have your burritos. Contact us if you ordered burritos from Uber eats. If you are not the right person, pls ignore. Thanks
@zetsubou_dono The solution is simple, just label the sports "cis woman" and "everyone else" instead of "woman" and "man" then no one would have a problem.
Sports distinctions are based on physicality and should therefore be based on sex not gender.
@AnSquatch Oh that is interesting. I guess I have only ever texted in toki pona, verbal interjections are a different ballgame
I guess it does make sense for the previous clause being related to the next. It sounds good and flows well too. I should really talk in #tokipona more
Based on this table (word frequency data taken from a survey done on the toki pona taso discord channel). "Average" word lengths would be the sum of the relative length columns.