I was looking for a post on Lemmy yesterday with a vague couple of keywords, used Kagi with "Fediverse forums" lens and bam, right there at the top was the post I was looking for, from a year ago! I couldn't believe it.
It's like how everyone used to search Reddit with site:reddit rather than using the reddit search. Except you can't do that too easily for Lemmy because of all the instances. But the Kagi lens does a pretty impressive job of solving that.
Is it true or just a stereotype? My kids love fruit. We go through probably 6kg of fruit a week, half of that is bananas and the rest is a mix of all sorts.
They obviously love candy too but they don't complain about fruit.
Vegetables on the other hand... Fiber without (much) sugar is offensive.
I guess I'm not the only one, but I haven't heard of this before. It seems hospital rates have been a thing for a long time (the sickness benefit hospital rate was 26.98 in 1998).
What's the reason for this policy? I get that if the tax payer is paying for your stay in hospital then they may not want to also be paying for your house elsewhere, but is forcing you to end the tenancy so you have no choice but to stay in hospital really going to help? Or is it supposed to be a threat (leave hospital or you will lose your house)?
How many people stay in hospital longer than 13 weeks? I can't imagine the cost is significant compared to the overall welfare bill if we keep paying people so they have less to worry about.
But, look, I know that the grandpajoehate is ostensibly a meme. It’s a joke poking fun at the very musical rules that allow a bed-bound person to magically be cured in the first place. But it never acknowledges the fact that his spontaneous rejuvenation is magic, and that the magic is the magic of love.
The main thing covered is the actual chain of events from the “black box” (my word for it) transcribed from the voice recordings from the report.
Yeah I think you're right. All this stuff:
Basically there was a lack of training, the crew didn’t figure out that the ship was still on autopilot until it was way too late.
The Crew had control of the throttle but not control of the helm direction. So when the crew thought they were doing a full reverse they were actually making the problem worse. The crew went up to 100% throttle because they thought they had changed helm direction but in reality they we’re just getting to the reef quicker because autopilot still was in control of the direction of the ship.
They didn’t follow procedure didn’t check if the autopilot was off and didn’t discover this until after they had hit the reef
Was in the video about the initial report. I think what it didn't have is the transcripts that provide that next level of detail.
It will be interesting to see what happens with this (if anything that we hear about). While you could place some blame with the commanding officer, it seems from this that the bulk of the blame belongs higher up the chain.
I think you previously posted the video about the interim report? I skimmed this video once I realised he was explaining a lot of things that were in the previous video.
Was there any significant new information? It sounds like the Commanding Officer was not trained (or at least not certified) for this vessel, I can't remember if that was in the previous video.
It does seem odd that we've had two ship groundings in the 6 months both caused by crew getting confused by the auto-pilot.
I don't have a Pixel 8 but that sounds highly unusual. I suspect you're right, maybe the option didn't exist in the same way on Android 14 and so it's copied over in a weird way.
I don't know a way to fix them other than just updating them all one by one. In recent Android versions the app can prompt you if it's missing the settings so it should be pretty safe to just disable it for everything that doesn't obviously need background usage.
Whoever is running the Alexandrite frontend you are accessing definitely could modify it to steal your password, so it's another point of trust. To help reduce this risk, many instances will run their own Alexandrite (and other third party frontends). With a quick search I didn't find lemm.ee hosting any though.
I believe OAuth support is planned for Lemmy but not sure on the timeline or the exact implementation.
On the relay emails, I believe some instances block their use, but the benefit of having many instances is you can find one that aligns to your values.
There is currently no OAuth, which sounds like what you're asking for.
Currently you need to trust the app and your instance. Most instances are implementing off-the-shelf lemmy but there is no way to confirm that.
Lemmy apps could steal your password if they wanted to, but if you use an open source app through say F-droid that compiles the apps from source, you can check the code if you have that skillset.
Ultimately the answer here though is not to trust your instance or app, but to instead not need to. Your account should be treated as disposable and (like every other site) you should be using a unique password not used anywhere else.
This way it doesn't matter if your instance steals your password, since they already know everything you've given them. Lemmy is all public anyway so there isn't much risk involved.
I'd argue the biggest risk is if your instance requires email validation, and it's easy enough to use a relay email (Firefox Relay, Simplelogin, Addy.io, etc) so that's unique as well.
Awesome, thanks for the explanation! I'd been put off Bazzite and other immutable distros because I had seen threads saying you basically needed flatpak for everything, but it sounds like that's not true.
I don't need a project at the moment but I will give this a go once I am ready for one!
How does Bazzite fare when I want to do something a bit different. Install docker, Python, PHP, sqlite, etc. I'd normally just install them, but does this work for Bazzite and other atomic/immutable distros?
For sure. One of my kids cites broccoli as a favourite food.
Apple's are meh with my kids but slice them and spread them with peanut butter with some raisins and they love them (a variation of bugs on a log).