@DefiiRobot@RoundtableSpace there is already a free website that gave this and existed years ago called Tinkercad, it was tested by electrical engineers and used in unis as well ...
don't use this one it's bluff and has more errors if ur interested in Electronics
JUST IN๐ฎ๐ทโ๐บ๐ธ๐ฎ๐ฑ๐ Iran threatened to cut global Internet Fiber Cable in Strait of Hormuz if dozens of western countries bomb Tehran and Occupy The Strait of Hormuz.
This is funny yet sad cuz that's sad reality of us algerian cetizens suffering from this company for years and now it's being out to the world which i'm glad abt it @Algerie_Telecom
Fortnite are aware of the Servers being down in Algeria, and have been trying for 2 weeks to contact Algerie Telecom without success
Tim Sweeney is asking if anyone has a business contact at Algerie Telecom to help resolve the issue
You can look for the list of men and women scientists in islamic golden age, there is a website built by english called https://t.co/TSJUfWePYH
Nowdays such figures are rare sadly ๐ฅบ
In their home countries those types will have their elders on their neck to do the prayer on time and yet outside their home countries they'd be doing it in public and wherever ! i can't with those types of hypocrites muslims ๐
As an ex Muslim born and raised in the Middle East, I can tell you that this is not about praying. They donโt do this in their own countries. This is about dominance and show of we own this. It is equivalent to a dog pissing on a post to mark its territory.
More languages, more insights!
A few interesting takeaways:
* Java and Kotlin are quick! Possible explanation: Google is heavily invested in performance here.
* Js is really fast as far as interpreted / jit languages go.
* Python is quite slow without things like PyPy.
The hijab is not a "symbol of oppression". For countless millions of Muslim women, the hijab is a choice that reflects personal values, faith, and identity, NOT oppression.
Many Muslim women wear the hijab as an expression of faith and devotion. They view it as a form of empowerment and an identity that promotes modesty (๐ซจ) and self-respect. For them, itโs a symbol of their relationship with God rather than a reflection of societal expectations or oppression.
For some, wearing the hijab is also a response to Islamophobia and discrimination. Many Muslim women in Western countries wear it as a declaration of pride and defiance against societal pressures to conform to Western standards of beauty and dress.
While some countries may enforce it, millions of Muslim women voluntarily choose to wear the hijab in countries where itโs not mandatory... Surveys and interviews across cultures show that for these women, the hijab offers a sense of community, cultural pride, autonomy, and control over how they present themselves to the world, and even political resistance *against* stereotypes about Muslim women being oppressed.
The hijab means different things to different women, but labeling it as a "symbol of oppression" disregards the voices of millions of women who find strength and meaning in wearing it.
@elonmusk as one good engineer has told me once : men of quality aren't afraid of equality ๐
and those statistics don't reflect the great job men are doing in hard work such as oil field, eletricity field..etc
Everyone talks about the same explorers like:
Columbus, Captain Cook and Marco Polo.
But there's one traveler who journeyed farther than all of them combined.
Meet Ibn Battuta, the greatest adventurer in human history (and his forgotten story):