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Posts
3
Comments
56
Joined
1 yr. ago

I shit posts and piss comments

  • It does mean doing something: they have to spell out whether consumers should have rights on this or not. Currently it's undefined, which is equivalent to "not."

    popularizing your viewpont

    And the initiative works against that? You say the cause could have gotten more publicity without it? I really don't see how that could happen, or understand the point in guilt tripping over it.

    energy wasted

    I'm starting to think this argument is energy wasted.

  • That's entirely backwards. I've boycotted these online kill-switched games pretty well, but that means fuck all because the general public is incapable of collectively caring about anything. Regulation on the other hand does have an effect, and should the initiative pass, EU is required to properly answer it.

  • Yeah, I'm aware of the drama. I just didn't expected this level of stonks to turn up.

  • Until last week I thought it was done, but somehow it flipped around. Things are looking pretty good, with massive youtubers and streamers taöking about it.

    I'm glad the ball is rolling again. This can change gaming and set a precedent for other things as well.

  • Like traditional forums, lemmy isn't a very real-time platform. That means it wouldn't be very useful.

  • Don't the admins use their own instance?

  • I have a vague recollection of there being a buyitforlife community

  • A lil above $16 per year is insanely cheap. My current shoes are on their fourth year and not falling apart anytime soon, but I can't expect to beat that value. If the boots are good on your feet and last 4 years of hard use, $65 is a miracle bargain.

  • Expired certs sounds like admins failed maintenance.

  • Native is the New Normal?

    That would be nice, if it works out as I've been wishing for.

  • Pretty much. Rust is very strict and explicit about everything, while typescript lets you kinda jam things together in ways that are very convenient but harder to keep track of in your head.

  • I've been using mega. They have a decent linux client and file manager integrations.

  • Those ai generated plants and hallway wall things bother me a bit.

  • I wonder how bad those big white renders would look IRL after some use and wear. Great opinion, though.

  • I don't think that's what was being asked. You could have your row houses art deco. That'd be kinda cool actually.

  • At that price point, something used and not particularly recent. Even an old laptop will be good performance-wise, but not necessarily storage-wise.

    However, buying a laptop to run at home might not be the most reliable or economical way to host Lemmy: you can rent a virtual server for not much, provided that you have access to a computer to remotely access the server with.

    I have zero experience with YunoHost, so I don't know how that may or may not limit the options. Probably the most common way is to use Lemmy-Ansible. It's easy (well, relatively speaking) and is maintained by the actual lemmy devs themselves. Managed services (ones where you don't have to deal with the server) should also exist for lemmy, but I've never used them.

  • Well, I did read it. Obviously Apple didn't use those exact words, but the argument is the same: users are incapable of making safe decisions and need to be protected from themselves.

  • When instances federate, they don't send old content. Old content will be fetched if a user tries to open it, for example by clicking a link to an old post (on some apps) or pasting its url into the search box.

    The data copied to the other instance will stay on the other instance, unless manually deleted for some reason.

  • Lemmy @lemmy.ml

    An unhinged Lemmy frontend

  • Rust @programming.dev

    Messing with MIDI files and soundfonts

    github.com /sevonj/sfontplayer
  • Mildly Infuriating @lemmy.world

    I don't know what this site wants me to allow, but no thanks.