• @TIEPilot
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    1172 years ago

    Aaron was reddit, and since his passing its shit now.

    RIP Mr Swartz, you are sorely missed.

    • @cyberpunk007
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      52 years ago

      I need a history lesson. Who is Aaron, what’s his deal?

      • @TIEPilot
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        162 years ago

        Honored to teach you about Aaron Swartz,

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aaron_Swartz

        He was the best of us and the jack boots murdered him. Free flow of ideas and knowledge, we cant have that. And reddit went to shit after… Again he was a poet warrior, I wish he was still here.

      • @Maslo
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        152 years ago

        Watch the documentary The Internet’s Own Boy. It’s very much worth the watch.

        • Querk [they/them]
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          2 years ago

          What an appropriate homage - linking to one of markdown’s originator’s Wikipedia page using markdown.

          “In 2002 Aaron Swartz created atx and referred to it as “the true structured text format”. Gruber created the Markdown language in 2004, with Swartz acting as beta tester … Markdown: Swartz was a major contributor to John Gruber’s Markdown,[249][250] a lightweight markup language for generating HTML, and author of its html2text translator. The syntax for Markdown was influenced by Swartz’s earlier atx language (2002)” from wikipedia

          • @[email protected]
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            52 years ago

            Brackets for the words you want. Immediately followed by parentheses. I’m sure this confuses some British folk but that’s a problem for another day

            • @[email protected]
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              42 years ago

              From a technical standpoint it irritates me that it’s not the URL in brackets and the words in parenthesis. But I also got used to it over 10 years ago so it is what it is.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                I’m curious why it is technically wrong. My only knowledge of programming is Matlab and a Coursera course on Intro to Python, so I have no idea why it would matter one way or the other. What is the technical standpoint you are referencing?