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Techy Cutie Pony Collection!

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Syntax quick reference: **bold** *italic* ||hide text|| `code` __underline__ ~~strike~~ ^sup^ %sub%

Detailed syntax guide

redweasel
Duck - "someone befriended them, saved them, coaxed them out of their shell, and showed them that sex is nothing to be afraid of. I’m kind of envious of that rape victim"

Fuzzbutt
or you know, ascii  
1100000 +  
1 = a  
10 = b  
11 = c  
100 = d  
etc…  
11010 = z
 
what I want to know is how do they make prints of those photos.
Parcly Taxel
Parcly Taxel - For supporting the site
Silly Pony - Celebrated the 13th anniversary of MLP:FIM, and 40 years of MLP!
Flower Trio - Helped others get their OC into the 2023 Derpibooru Collab.
Roseluck - Had their OC in the 2023 Derpibooru Collab.
Tree of Harmony - Drew someone's OC for the 2022 Community Collab
Elements of Harmony - Had an OC in the 2022 Community Collab
Philomena - For helping others attend the 2021 community collab
Twinkling Balloon - Took part in the 2021 community collab.
Ten years of changes - Celebrated the 10th anniversary of MLP:FiM!
Happy Derpy! - For Patreon supporters

Princess of Science
@Nomi_Slam Why “yes” and “64”? With only two keys and a space bar, creating English sentences is surprisingly easy.
 
There are three ways of pressing the two keys: left (0), right (1) or both (**). This enables a coding scheme somewhat like Morse code, where ** delineates each letter:
 
0* -> E  
1* -> T  
01* -> A  
10* -> N  
0000* -> H  
1011* -> Y  
11000* -> 7  
010101* -> .  
and so on. * by itself (without any previous 0s or 1s) would be a new line; carriage return is as in real-life typewriters, where the right hoof pushes on the carriage. The space bar (_) would be as usual, but pressing it along with the other keys would have some further effects:  
_ + 1 -> shift  
_ + 0 -> tab  
_ + * -> move carriage back one position
 
Of course, this typewriter having two keys was a result of rushed animation. Pony computer keyboards would have (say) seven keys, four on the top and three on the bottom, where each single key press and two-key chord would encode information.