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there's that yes, also, but it's not what he wrote and it's not like it


native speaker of assembly language?


I have dreamt in VAX assembly


Is it still okay to make "nothing sucks like a VAX" jokes?

(I kid, I think VMS has a better design than Linux)


> Is it still okay to make "nothing sucks like a VAX" jokes?

Please!

I was a stage II CS student learning assembly programming on a VAX simulator. Wrote a VAX simulator, in VAX assembly then ran VAX assembly programmes on it.

Was a lot of fun. The dreams were weird tho


duuuuuude for real a11y? what kind of weird lingo flex is that?


It's a longstanding abbreviation for "accessibility", along the same lines of i18n being an abbreviation for internationalisation. There's the first letter, and the last letter, and between them a count of the number of letters elidded.


It's really uncommon to see, I wouldn't call it "long-standing" at all. It's really obscure jargon that even most technical people don't know. At least "i18n" is widespread enough that most people will see it, though that's stupid too because it's incredibly unclear. I had no idea what it meant until this year despite having seen it for a decade or more.


Yeah English needs another vocab grouping.

Greek, Latin and <tech lingo>.


The word you're looking for is "jargon". It refers to niche-specific words that are hard for outsiders to understand, and isn't just tech-specific. "Lingo" is a much broader term.


True. I was grasping at straws for the right word. Thank you.

The Greek/Latin/<jargon> structure should be standard or taught in schools in some capacity.

Basic programming concepts are popular, useful and should probably be taught as a sub category of English... given that programming is supposed to be a language, and pull its roots (somewhat) from English or "natural language".

Society would produce higher quality code if the basic concepts were considered as a literacy requirement for children.


> It's a longstanding abbreviation for "accessibility"

It's certainly not widespread. Or at least, this is the first time I've ever seen it.


It's a word that starts with a, then 11 letters, then ends in y. The format is not hard to grok once you understand it then context and sheer elimination leaves only a few choices

edit: I will say this is a bad example because looking it up there is 40+ words that fit this description so maybe I am biased by experience. i18n works better but I think my point is no longer correct.


dang it, off to pursue this rabbit hole of "wait,what's dat?"


where does amazon requires 2fa for deliveries or be present for it? in nj/ny doesn't seem to happen


in Germany they do, but afaict usually only for expensive packages.


sounds like USA and it's relation to its members states


that's what unions are for if only an engineer could engineer a solution to what afflicts unions, dat be great


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