M (German: M – Eine Stadt sucht einen Mörder — M – A City Searches for a Murderer) is a 1931 German horror drama-thriller film directed by Fritz Lang and starring Peter Lorre. The film was written by Lang and his wife, Thea von Harbou, and was the director's first sound film.The film revolves around the actions of a serial killer of children and the manhunt for him, conducted by both the police and the criminal underworld. Now considered a classic, the film was deemed by Fritz Lang to be his finest work.
== Plot ==
A group of children are playing an elimination game in the courtyard of an apartment...
Hello there, friends! I wanted to stop by and let @Undo know that our first cohorts of raters for comment classification are getting invited tomorrow, a batch of moderators and a batch of folks who responded to the survey at the end of Jay's blog post.
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Emails go out midday tomorrow! And we've made a GDPR/lawyer-compliant plan for data sharing when we get to the end.
Reviewing to leave this open. @PotatoLatte In general, whenever an older, fixed bug shows up again, it's OK (and usually preferred) to post a new bug report, rather than removing the status-completed tag on the older one. — Sonic the Inclusive Hedgehogyesterday
@rene You used your Chaos Emerald on this question. It was subsequently reopened. Note that the advice in my comment above came straight from a team member.
@NogShine Unfortunately, there's no way to reach that user - they seem to not respond to meta questions about them on other sites, and when I ping them in a comment, they never respond.
They use an automated tool for most of their edits.
Very unimportant remark: my office modem is broken and there's no internet since 3 days ago, relying on Mi-Fi instead...
2 weeks, not 1 month. ;)
@NogShine Red Shog
@SonictheInclusiveHedgehog why pinging Adam about it? Anyway, when closed one has to manually submit via JS, it's not really simple so most people won't bother.
One good thing in Israel is we have decent ISP companies, big and stable.
So such things as you describe is really rare.
There is the occasional blip, sometimes even hours, but not several weeks... worst we had was half day when modem got borked, ISP sent a new modem and installed it.
Telecon with ISP: "The line is dead"..."Have you restarted your computer by turning it off and on again?"... "The line is dead, there is no carrier"..."Have you restarted your computer by turning it off and on again?"... "I've tried two modems, plugged into the main line with no extensions, there is no carrier, no signal at all!"..."Have you restarted your computer by turning it off and on again?".
@rene I disagree. Nothing wrong checking a user who, for example, submitted a bad suggested edit, and going over the rest of their actions, and making proper actions based on that, e.g. reject more edits if they're bad, etc. /cc @Drag
@rene, pfff searching all question / answer from an user is easy. I guess I will just ignore the user. And stop the "Wtf did he still post this time?" by visiting his profile. But I feel like those vote were legitimate and not vendetta or hunt.
Isn't height a JavaScript library though? You can find out by running npm install height much like you would do for left padding a string. (found here)
@TimPost in the q-ban algorithm it does count closed questions. With your revision 34 edit can I conclude that closed but not duplicate questions contribute to a q-ban? Or is this too much detail for anyone who stumbles on that FAQ and are you only trying to encourage posting?
@rene I envision that there may be a possibility that dupe closures don't count towards bans, given that they don't count towards migration rejection and that they don't make a question eligible for RemoveAbandonedClosed Roomba deletion.
Today on this question I commented something along the lines of "what do you want to do, force them to ask their employer to let them verify an answer?", but apparently that is against the CoC. I cannot figure out why. Can someone here?
Nope, only mods can see deleted comments. Was hoping for some insight here from others as to what would be wrong with that comment. I'm pretty sure it was flagged under the new CoC reasons.
The four national languages of Switzerland are German, French, Italian and Romansh. All but Romansh maintain equal status as official languages at the national level within the Federal Administration of the Swiss Confederation. In some situations, Latin is used, particularly as a single language to denote the country.
In 2015, the population of Switzerland was 63.0% native speakers of German (59.5% speak Swiss German and/or 10.4% Standard German at home); 22.7% French (mostly Swiss French, but including some Arpitan dialects); 8.4% Italian (mostly Swiss Italian, but including Lombard dialects...
Ah! It's actually (nearly) the same word in English: Romansh (Romanish)
@Tinkeringbell Yeah, I'm quite skilled at both the Indian and American (Southern Californian) accents of English, and picked up quite a bit from watching Techmoan (a British YouTuber)