

The Nazi gold is still very much a thing.
The Nazi gold was given back. It’s very much not a thing anymore. And back to the jews I mean, not Germany.
I’m a #SoftwareDeveloper from #Switzerland. My languages are #Java, #CSharp, #Javascript, German, English, and #SwissGerman. I’m in the process of #LearningJapanese.
I like to make custom #UserScripts and #UserStyles to personalize my experience on the web. In terms of #Gaming, currently I’m mainly interested in #VintageStory and #HonkaiStarRail. I’m a big fan of #Modding.
I also watch #Anime and read #Manga.
#fedi22 (for fediverse.info)


The Nazi gold is still very much a thing.
The Nazi gold was given back. It’s very much not a thing anymore. And back to the jews I mean, not Germany.
This only applies though if it’s a per-device passkey that uses a private key stored securely that cannot be exported.
If the private key can be exported, it can be stolen and the factors becomes invalid.
But people also store their private key in cloud solutions (some here mentioned doing that) which just makes the factor invalid anyway, since then it’s not device-bound anymore, and it’s the device that verifies your identity with those methods.
Like, what if someone hacks the cloud service storing the passkeys and steals them? Not really any different from storing passwords in a cloud, and that one isn’t called 2FA either.


This is the fediverse, I recommend finding peace with the fact you’ll run into different customs here.
OP created a microblog post, which means Mastodon is the target audience, not Lemmy. For Mastodon, it’s essential to include mentions, even to the person you’re replying to, because otherwise Mastodon won’t notify the user of the reply.
Since Mastodon is the target audience here, OP probably also expected replies to come from that side of the fediverse, not the threadiverse. Their instance by default doesn’t display your instance’s name next to your name, nor does it display your software there. So they probably weren’t aware the user they were replying to used Lemmy. Hence the mention.


We’re on the fediverse, get used to there being differences like this. Especially if you’re on an instance which portrays everything the same.
In this case, you’re looking at a microblog post and its replies, not a thread. It’s still posted in a community, because the user uses Mbin which does still require posts made from it to be associated with a community, and that’s why Lemmy displays it as a regular thread. But it’s not.
Since OP uses Mbin, which supports both, this being a microblog post specifically suggests their target audience is Mastodon, and they expected to get replies from Mastodon here. On Mastodon, explicit mentions are essential, as that’s how Mastodon decides whom to notify. The replied to user doesn’t get notified unless they are also mentioned in the post.
Mbin’s default behavior doesn’t help here, as it doesn’t show a user’s instance (so you have to click through to people’s profile to see their software, which OP probably doesn’t do, I don’t either), and includes the mentions by default for microblog replies (so removing them is more work than leaving them be).


something they wouldn’t dare do if Biden was still president and Lina Khan was still head of the FTC
Pretty sure the user folder has been onedrive for ages, including during Biden’s presidency.
Not everything is about politics.


You’re aware you can just link to all relevant pages in a single post, right? You can add links to your description.
programming.dev is a Lemmy instance, right? Then you should be able to use masked links via Markdown too. Like this: [text](link), it’ll display as clickable text.
What the person you’re arguing with is annoyed by is that you’re making a new post for every page you think is relevant. When you should be making one post that says all you want to say and links to all the pages you want to link to.


This isn’t an accusation, but was this comment written with AI? There’s a glaring logical error here which I think a human would catch easily, but an LLM (which is just a natural language generator, not a logic processor) could possibly overlook.
Specifically, your arguments don’t really make a lot of sense. They’re also not targeted at my claim. It reads more like a defense of JPlus. To which I want to clarify, I merely took issue with the specific claim I quoted, I wasn’t trying to say there’s no point to JPlus. There’s no need to defend JPlus in general. So I’m going to dismiss runtime behaviors since that has nothing to do with the syntax.
Groovy introduces dynamic typing
Java has dynamic typing already. Groovy introduced it first, but it’s not a Groovy exclusive feature anymore. It’s also optional.
additional syntax
There being additional syntax doesn’t matter if it’s optional. We’re talking here about whether Java code works in Groovy/JPlus, and it does. Not the other way around. At least that’s what I understood.
JPlus also adds the nullsafe and elvis operators, so it also adds additional syntax and JPlus code won’t work when compiled with Java directly.
Groovy is highly compatible with Java and most Java code runs in Groovy without changes. However, it’s not 100% identical.
JPlus also doesn’t guarantee being 100% identical. It says “mostly” the same.
Basically, none of the arguments really compare the two in the context given. The runtime behavior is the only real difference listed here, but that’s irrelevant in the context of them being supersets.


Notably, there is currently no ‘superset’ language that keeps Java syntax almost intact
There’s groovy iirc.


Of course he does, Russia will outlast Ukraine in the long run if NATO countries don’t start joining the fight. I don’t see how it would be a surprise that he dreams of getting actual help.
Even if Ukraine somehow wins this, the war got to be exhausting and stressful for him and everyone else involved. Getting help, or even just a second enemy for Russia to be distracted by, would be a positive for them no matter where this goes.
Can you name examples?
We did always implement all the EU sanctions afaik.
In case you meant us not using Russian assets to help Ukraine like the EU does, iirc they’re using interest, not the actual assets, for that. Which I remember reading (but don’t have a source right now) isn’t possible for Switzerland due to how they are stored in commercial banks rather than central repositories. And just seizing them would be illegal. It’s not like we don’t want to (though that’s probably a factor too), but more like we can’t.