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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)AR
Posts
4
Comments
37
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I believe this is correct. So an infographic for example would need to be scrolled before you get to the comments. If it doesn’t ignore screen height the preview will compress it making it look more narrow, working as more of a preview

  • Agree with everything you said, but there’s nothing Reddit could do to win me back. They’re a corporation and stopped pretending to give a shit about their users. Reversing their decision to go public would catch my eye, but there’s an ice cubes chance in hell of that happening. And even if they did, they’re 1 threat from VC away from pulling similar scummy shit again a year down the line.

    The way I see it, fediverse is the only way forward.

  • I’ve had the same issue. It seems to have more trouble when I’m connected to something else via Bluetooth already. Disconnecting everything before putting in an Airpod seems to work, but is pretty inconvenient.

  • I understand this is a very simple meme, but as someone who grew up learning French I really enjoy that memes like this one - where the punchline is multilingual, are becoming popular

  • To expand on the idea:

    Ideally this would incentivize devs who are hesitant about the cost of hosting to spin up a server, bringing us more instance options and helping to further decentralize the platform.

    Right now fedi relies on donations, and it seems to be working, but at some point the growth could outpace the donations leading to large instances shutting down. Rewards on Reddit are dumb as shit cause they feed an amoral corporation, but on Lemmy they would directly support those who are lending their time, money, and expertise to the growth of the fediverse.

  • They said this about Reddit for years. Even now most people I know IRL have a vague understanding of Reddit. 5 months ago my dad was in a phase of obsessively consuming Skiing content and he signed up for Reddit and found other subs to match his interests.

    Anyone who cares about this sort of social media shouldn’t have an issue. And keeping out wider masses is what makes these platforms so engaging when they hit the young/mature stage, IMO