If you understand Danish, any of the communities on Feddit.dk should be interesting… But otherwise they probably aren’t :P
If you understand Danish, any of the communities on Feddit.dk should be interesting… But otherwise they probably aren’t :P
Just hijacking the top comment to say that it has been suggested, just not implemented yet https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/818
I’ll probably update within a week as well :)
I’m quite sure such on the fly price changes are illegal. At least here in Denmark.
Even reddit is still niche when it comes to social media and has always been. It’s become a little more mainstream the last few years, but for most people social media still equals Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Snapchat and such.
Very nice even :D
But maybe Rust isn’t that niche, but the Fediverse apps and projects are niche themselves.
Lemmy is niche even within the fediverse, where microblogging still dominates and the threadiverse style apps are smaller. It’s just not a very large space.
I haven’t had big problems honestly. Still have less than 100GB of storage, which is like 0 dollars on object storage.
I found it very easy to start with the ansible setup and later changed to self managed docker. I even moved servers once and it worked fine.
Overall I haven’t had any issues, but I’m also a software engineer so maybe I know more than others. There are some missing features for sure, but I don’t think it’s so bad so far at least.
Agreed, I would definitely not refer to the first one as self hosting without qualifying further.
I believe that would make it so basically no women can compete at the highest levels.
Goddamn it
I get “across”, but what about again?
Also the post complains about the amount of storage used by caching images but that was also fixed/improved in v0.19.4
You don’t need 0.19.4 to avoid large storage costs. You can adjust your nginx setup to set a limit on the size of images allowed. For example, Feddit.dk only allows images up to 5MB. Anything larger than that will be linked to rather than stored locally.
I really don’t think the problem with people not understanding large numbers has anything to do with the base. It’s just lots of people not having a good maths education.
12 is a far superior number to 10. It is sacrilege that we started using 10 instead of 12.
Oh I get it, I totally do. But of all the celebrities who are actually worthy of praise, I can’t think of anyone else off the top of my head who deserves it more.
But I mean it’s not like I worship Keanu, he’s just cool.
I think it is solvable. Your instance keeps track of the instances it is connected with. It could just do the search and find the post on your own instance if the domain is among the connected other instances.
EDIT: Right, it doesn’t fix the problem of stumbling upon a link to a fediverse instance somewhere else. Not sure how you could deal with that one
Don’t know where I read it, but I also like this metaphorical comparison:
Traditional social media is like a shop, except the customers are advertisers and you, as a user sit on the shelves, waiting to be bought. It’s made entirely for revenue and profit, everything else is secondary. The shop will gladly show you an advertiser that pays for your attention before showing you your parent’s vacation photos or the important post from that group you follow.
A fediverse instance is like a community garden. Nobody is a product and nobody is buying anything for themselves. Instead, everyone grows the garden together. Some people took initiative and responsibility with running the garden (admins/mods) and others joined and shared the garden with them and supported the garden with funds and content.
In the fediverse garden, there is no other point than talking amongst each other and the garden is connected to other gardens that work mostly with the same principles and the gardens “cross-polinate” each other with discussions and content and through that help each other grow even more.
The most active is probably the news community, !nyheder@feddit.dk with 80 active users per week according to the sidebar. I think a good portion of them are users on external instances.