• Inside Europe’s Falling Test Lab

    This video is so cool! It dives into what happens to your brain in zero gravity, showing both the quick changes during weightless flights and the long-term effects astronauts deal with after being in space.

  • Welcome to the language exchange channel, find your language partner here

    🌍 Welcome, Language Explorers!
    This space is dedicated to help you find a language partner from anywhere in the world! 🌐
    It was inspired by a dear friend of mine who had this wonderful idea. I loved it and thought: why not make it real? So here we are! 💖

    We’ve got lots of language learners and polyglots here. I am sure everyone knows at least one language and is probably learning another. đŸ€“
    Looking to exchange languages? 💬
    Do you speak a language someone else is eager to learn? 🎯
    Then you’re in the right place! ✅

    If you haven’t found someone offering the language you're looking for, don’t worry, just post your own offer! 💌

    📝 When creating your post, follow this simple template:

    1. A brief introduction of yourself.

    Tell us your name and where you're from, just a general location like “Sweden” is enough! This helps others align time zones with you. 🌎
    Sharing a few hobbies 🎹🎼🎾 can also help you connect with like-minded friends.

    2. Which language can you offer?

    To get something, you gotta give something! 💡
    Let people know what you can help them with.

    3. Which language do you want to learn?

    Human languages, programming languages đŸ‘©â€đŸ’», or even alien languages đŸ‘œ, just no pigeon talk 🐩😄

    4. How often would you like to exchange?

    Once a week? An hour per session? Be clear so people know what to expect.

    5. How can others contact you?

    You can be messaged right here, or if you've joined our Discord server 🎧, you can chat by voice or video there too!

    đŸ·ïž Don’t forget to add tags to your post!
    Use tags like Offering English or Seeking Swedish so others can find you more easily 🔍

    Thanks for being part of this community. Have fun and happy language learning! 🎉🌟

  • Offering English, Chinese, Swedish | Seeking Japanese

    1. Brief introduction about yourself:

    My name is Arya, I live in Sweden (CET Zone). I work as a substitute teacher in the public schools currently. In my spare time, I play boardgame with friends, online and offline.

    2. Which language can you offer?

    I can offer Chinese (Mandarin), English and Swedish.

    3. Which language do you want to learn?

    I am learning Japanese and would really like to find a pal to practice oral Japanese with.

    4. How often would you like to exchange?

    Once a week suits me best, I am open every weekend, after 6 PM.

    5. How can others contact you?

    DM me here on the website or in our Discord server: https://discord.com/invite/sazRac4kSa

  • Google Search Console reports duplicate field url for my site

    Google Search Console reports a critical issue ⚠ for pnl.dev: a 'duplicate URL property' is preventing my website from being indexed đŸš«.

    It turns out the problem was caused by a small HTML attribute: itemprop="url" đŸ§©. This attribute is part of Microdata, used to define metadata for search engines. But if misused, it can confuse crawlers and hurt indexing 📉.

    Read more details in my blog article👉 https://revir.github.io/2025/07/13/Coding-Google-Search-Console-reports-duplicate-field-url/

  • Captionz - major update to make youtube more useful for language learning.

    Hey! Hope you had an awesome weekend.

    Just wanted to share an update I’m really excited about: I’ve been working on Captionz, and it just got a major upgrade! 🎉 It now supports language-specific search, which means you can search for words spoken in a particular language inside YouTube videos.

    So, for example—if you’re learning Swedish like I am—you can type in any Swedish word (or English word?), and Captionz will show you YouTube videos where people are actually speaking Swedish. No more digging through irrelevant content. It’s like turning YouTube into your own personal language-learning search engine.

    Ever tried using YouTube to learn a language?

    Maybe you're following some cool SFI teachers or native speakers on YouTube—maybe it’s French, Spanish, Japanese, whatever. That’s awesome, but YouTube doesn’t really give you good tools to learn from those videos, right? That's where Captionz comes in. It’s made specifically for language learners who want to use real, native content to study smarter.

    Here’s what it can do:

    Dual subtitles? Yep. See both the original language and your native language side-by-side. Super helpful for understanding context and structure.

    A-B repeat? You got it. Replay a sentence or phrase over and over until it sticks. (Yes, it’s that good ol’ A-to-B loop feature from back in the day!)

    Search any word or phrase? Big yes. Want to hear how native speakers say “hej dĂ„â€ or “ça va”? Search it and boom—real people saying it in real videos.

    Add notes? Kind of. Right now, you can add notes during the video, and they’ll fly across the screen like flying bullets. It’s a fun start, but still in development—private notes and better note management are on the roadmap.

    Why this matters

    This project really means a lot to me. I love YouTube, and I genuinely believe it’s one of the best tools for language learning. There’s always someone out there creating exactly what you need to hear or see—you just need a better way to find it. That’s the whole idea behind Captionz.

    Whether you're just starting out or you're already deep into your language journey, I hope Captionz makes it easier, more interactive, and honestly, more fun.

    A few quick tips to get the most out of Captionz

    Use dual subtitles to compare sentence structure and learn natural phrasing.

    Loop tricky sentences with A-B repeat and shadow them until they sound natural.

    Search new words you encounter in lessons and see how they’re actually used by native speakers.

    Follow channels in your target language and combine them with Captionz for a powerful study combo.

    Thanks for reading this far! 😄 I’d love for you to try it out and let me know what you think. More features are in the works, and your feedback helps shape where this goes next.

    By the way—what language are you learning right now? And do you have a favorite YouTube channel for it? Comment under the topic. I’m always looking for good recommendations!

    Happy learning!

    Screenshot 2025-06-29 211639.png Screenshot 2025-06-29 211239.png

  • pronounciation on Anki doesnt work sometimes

    Screenshot 2025-07-05 at 22.06.28.png

  • Ordböcker: The all-in-one dictionary app for learning Swedish.

    Hi everyone,

    I hope you've had a great week of learning languages and coding! As someone learning Swedish myself, I know how tough it can be—especially if you're shy like me and feel awkward speaking with native speakers. Reading news articles? Even harder, with all the unfamiliar words.

    That’s exactly why I built Ordböcker: an all-in-one dictionary app to make Swedish learning easier and less intimidating.

    Marquee Promo.png

    With Ordböcker, you can instantly look up any word on a webpage—just double-click it. You’ll get definitions from multiple trusted sources with one click on the icon. Vocabulary is the biggest challenge when reading Swedish news—that’s exactly what Ordböcker helps with.

    For example, my wife, who’s an intermediate learner, prefers svenska.se for Swedish–Swedish definitions. I’m still a beginner, so I stick with Glosbe.

    Here are some dictionaries I find helpful and set as default, but you can suggest more:
    đŸ”č Beginner-friendly:
    Glosbe (Swedish–English)
    Reverso (context examples)
    Captionz (YouTube examples)
    đŸ”č Intermediate:
    Svenska.se (SAOL, SO, SAOB—all in one)

    Ordböcker also lets you export your word history to Anki flashcards with just one click—super handy if you’re serious about remembering what you’ve learned.

    If you haven’t tried Anki yet, it’s a fantastic app that helps you review words over time using spaced repetition (a fancy way of saying it reminds you just before you’re about to forget).

    Honestly, Anki is my secret weapon for learning languages. I owe half my Swedish vocabulary to it—and now with Ordböcker, adding new words takes less effort.

    Swedish verbs change differently, so I also wanted it to find the root form of words—not all dictionary tools can do that. Certainly Dictionariez is more focused on English, and don’t really prioritize Swedish. For example, when I look up the word fart, I want the Swedish meaning to show up first in Ordböcker.

    Ordböcker1.png

    If you’re already using Dictionariez and mainly learning Swedish through English, I recommend switching to Ordböcker. It offers most of the same features but prioritizes Swedish over English.

    My tip? Don’t take on too many new words at once—stay motivated, not overwhelmed.
    Focus on words you actually see and hear often. It’s more useful to really know 10 common words than to half-remember 100 rare ones.

    When you add words to Anki, keep the cards simple. Just the word, a short definition, maybe an example sentence. If a card feels like homework, you’ll end up skipping it.

    Try to review a little bit every day. Even 5–10 minutes of Anki goes a long way—consistency really is the secret.

    And remember, you don’t have to understand everything right away. Getting the general idea is already a win!

    If you try out Ordböcker, I’d love to hear what you think. Got suggestions, ideas, or something that’s not working? Your feedback helps me make it better for everyone learning Swedish!

    Download links Ordböcker on Chrome Ordböcker on Microsoft Edge Ordböcker on Firefox
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Improve your team's collaboration and performance with retrospective meetings! Retro meetings promote openness, using engaging formats and setting clear agendas. The team assess their way of working and decides how to adjust it for the better. The Retros log is a practical toolkit for teams committed to their continuous improvement. With a defined structure, you can log the details about each meetings and the agreements. It includes an extensive step-by-step guide with recommendations, and links to icebreakers and more retro formats!