So you’re saying it’s about as robust as a typical Linux application then?
So you’re saying it’s about as robust as a typical Linux application then?
The only way to change someone’s core values is to show them the error of their ways WITHIN their own current value system.
If you can manage to find some purchase there you might have a chance, but it’s more likely that you will not find it.
I don’t think that last part is entirely accurate. The reason the weak gravity causes tides is actually because it’s acting over the entire ocean all at once.
It turns out that the ocean is a bit heavy… when you add up the entire mass of all of the water, this imparts quite a substantial bit of potential energy. This can be seen as a “bulge” outward in the moon’s direction, making the planet look a little “squished”.
If the planet were perfectly smooth, this probably would be fairly stable as the bulge wrapped around the planet… however, because we have continents and the sea floor, this movement of water crashes into the land and causes ripple effects with a huge amount of kinetic energy.
I don’t think it would take more that a few years for this process to ramp up to our current level of tides, if there were some way of doing such a ramp up in a controlled way.
You could try Morning Brew
There are only 3 hard problems in programming:
0: Cache invalidation
2: Race conditions
1: Naming things
3: Off-by-one errors
I only use the Subscriptions feed, and use an extension that blocks recommendations and shorts.
Additionally, before watching any video I’ll check the channel page to see if YouTube is hiding any of that person’s videos from me (which they do even on the Subscriptions feed sometimes).
Fuck the algorithm.
You don’t need a mail server if all you want is a custom email domain. You can just use something like CloudFlare DNS to have them forward all emails to your domain to another private email address (e.g. Gmail).
Some people here are failing at basic reading comprehension… so many comments talking about “Lemmy clients”, when the whole point is that this for links from OUTSIDE of Lemmy.
That being said, I wonder if this couldn’t be solved by Lemmy directly somehow…? Ideally we could have some way to say “this is my home” that any given instance could know and redirect you from any linked instance back to your home, without any middle-man.
But I don’t know of any way to share that data without some central repository host (which obviously goes against the fediverse vision). Ideally there could be some kind of “shared local storage” in the browser that all instances could use, but I’m not aware any way to do that.
Obviously a browser extension would work, but I don’t think that’s a good solution.
Multi-platform images are kept up-to-date on this 3rd party repo: https://github.com/ubergeek77/lemmy-docker-multiarch
While I also don’t like JS, I just want to point out that not having JS on the website does nothing to prevent an XSS attack that injects JS into a site. This is more of a back-end kind of problem.
@lemmy.link uses RSS repost bots, so I guess you can just let Lemmy be your RSS aggregator.
The top part is useless anyway, it’s funnier if you just crop off the header… that’s just one of those things people slap on so they can feel like they’ve contributed something, but really it’s just noise.
Alternatively, just use this one instead:
It’s a travesty that this doesn’t have more upvotes
How is this different from just searching for posts on the original “seed instance”? Presumably you’re crawling through everything on all of the instances that it’s aware of, as opposed to the Lemmy built-in search which would only search communities that have a subscriber?
Transferring is theoretically technically possible (Mastodon does it), but Lemmy hasn’t implemented the option yet. There’s an issue for it on their GitHub.
This is the entire point of PowerShell