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That sucks, but honestly I’d get out of there as fast as possible. Life is too short to live under unfulfilling work conditions for any extended amount of time.


It’s unlikely, because putting the month first is a US thing. In France it would be 20/04, or “20 avril”.

Still, stoner-cultures in many countries in Europe celebrate 4-20, definitively a bunch of Frenchies getting extra stoned that day. It's probably the de-facto "international cannabis day" in most places in the world, at least the ones influenced by US culture which reached pretty far in its heyday.

It’s the French word for “byte”. In France your computer has Ko/Mo/Go.

From https://archive.org/details/byte-magazine-1977-02/page/n145/...:

“A byte was described as consisting of any number of parallel bits from one to six. Thus a byte was assumed to have a length appropriate for the occasion. Its first use was in the context of the input-output equipment of the 1950s, which handled six bits at a time.”


Since 1000 is 3e8, I’ll argue that it should be 300000000 bytes.

Given that 99.87% are not in the top 1000, probably the majority.

> Then words could be color-coded by impact.

Or by difficulty to make sense of them.


Just wait until you learn what mess UTF-8 will turn your characters into. ;)

Mails are (or used to be) processed line-by-line, typically using fixed-length buffers. This avoids dynamic memory allocation and having to write a streaming parser. RFC 821 finally limited the line length to at most 1000 bytes.

Given a mechanism for soft line breaks, breaking already at below 80 characters would increase compatibility with older mail software and be more convenient when listing the raw email in a terminal.

This is also why MIME Base64 typically inserts line breaks after 76 characters.


In early days, many/most people also read their email on terminals (or printers) with 80-column lines, so breaking lines at 72-ish was considered good email etiquette (to allow for later quoting prefix ">" without exceeding 80 characters).

One of the technical marvels of the day were mail and usenet clients that could properly render quoted text from infinite, never ending flame wars!

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