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450
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • We know this as the Caravan Game.

    Anal Buccaneer
    Anal Xplore
    Anal Freedom
    Anal Cavalier

  • Yeah, I hate those little dots and I inevitably jump through the hoops until I've clicked enough things to make them go away.

  • Going into more detail would be helpful: Do you get an error? Do some settings restore or change? How old is your backup (i.e. from what version of Voyager)? Android or iPhone (before and after)? Are you selecting a file from your device, or trying to use from cloud storage (Google Drive, Nextcloud, etc)?

  • Then the UK's equally dumb: it was 10:04 pm BST (GMT+1) cos daylight savings is a thing in most of Europe too. At least it's synchronised across Europe[The EU is planning on killing daylight savings but I have no idea if the UK will do the sensible thing and go along when/if this happens] so you just need to remember that most[thanks for making it more confusing, Mexico] of North America changes a few weeks earlier.

    Also, the UK says GMT/BST which is nice and clear - calling both EST and EDT "Eastern Time" makes even more of a mess!

    And yes, I've just rediscovered you can use footnotes, why do you ask?

  • The duplicate content thing is kinda impossible to solve perfectly. Some people will tell you it's a feature, and it can be interesting to see the different instances' comment sections (especially after moderation), but yeah it can be annoying to have your feed dominated by a few stories.

    The default web front-end will merge crossposts, but won't if they're multiple posts to the same URL. I think some of the apps do have that deduplication as a feature, but I couldn't tell you which.

    I remember the same problem from my Reddit days, but there wasn't generally so many similar, overlapping communities.

  • From the Lemmy docs:

    • Active (default): Calculates a rank based on the score and time of the latest comment, with decay over time
    • Hot: Like active, but uses time when the post was published

    My default is set to

    • Scaled: Like hot, but gives a boost to less active communities

    This is the newest sorting option, I think, and it helps me not miss posts from the smaller comms - particularly ones where people are asking a question and there's been no engagement. Ideally I'd like to have Mastodon-style lists so I could have "quiet comms" or something and check them all every so often.

    I will switch to new or top 6h/24h if I've been on recently and just want to see what's fresh. Top all time or 1y if I'm looking at new-to-me comms so I can see what type of thing to expect from it.

  • There's no algorithm here, so use the different sorting options (for both posts and comments), as well as setting your favourite as default once you see what works for you.

    the different sort options are of course algorithms, but I mean there's no automatic, manipulative system like YouTube's "The Algorithm", Facebook, TikTok, etc.

    Voting doesn't tune your algorithm, so I'd say only use downvoting for things that are low quality, trolling, in the wrong sub, duplicate posts, etc. Your votes aren't private, by the way - although Lemmy itself doesn't display voters' names, that info is in every server's database, and some other software in the Fediverse does show them.

    There are quite a few apps available, I like Voyager on Android and I stick to the default website on my computer.

  • I think scaled is better than hot otherwise you'll never see anything from your small communities.

  • Sometimes I get downvotes that make no sense, so I just chose to believe it was an accident.

  • [MIT] does not allow removing the original license and purport that the code was created by someone else.

    Sounds like it wouldn't matter which licence he used. Shitty behaviour from Microsoft.

  • Not quite what you were asking for, but there is https://tomgroenwoldt.github.io/helix-shortcut-quiz/

    It's quite good for letting you know about things you didn't know you could do, but sometimes it tells me I'm wrong because I'd do it a different way - e.g. I'd go to line 13 by :13 but it wants 13G.

    Also, from within Helix you can do space ? to get the list of commands and any bindings they're on.

    edit: also, FYI Helix and similar are modal, not modular (although there is a plugin system on the way).

  • I have Tasker running, and you can set it up to do this too. Between ntfy and Google's version I think I'm covered already!

  • Most of the manga I have is amateur translated stuff, so the metadata quality varies with release groups.

    The graphic novels are generally retail releases, but sometimes I still want to edit to get rid of marketing words (e.g. the title might mention how it's now a Netflix series or something).

  • I guess I've just been lucky then! I've stripped DRM off everything else, so I expect theirs would come off using the same tools.

  • The latest Kindle update broke the jailbreak even if it was installed, so you'll need to stop updates. You could just leave it in airplane mode, but not being able to use the internet to pull down books from your Calibre-web server means you may as well just send books via Calibre.

    I'm planning on getting a Kobo Clara BW when my Kindle dies (it's currently got holes at the corners and a few dodgy-sounding rattles so soon™). Then I can use Koreader+Calibre-web to download books and sync read state like you can do with Amazon.

    So your process here is get comics -> comictagger -> upload to server and kavita, correct?

    Pretty much, apart from that I often add them and only fix if necessary, e.g. they're not going into series properly.

  • None of the books I've bought from kobo.com have DRM.

  • I went with ntfy as well - you can set the different levels to alert in different ways and my max priority is set to always ring even if the phone is on silent. Mostly I use max prio as a find-my-phone tool, but there are real alerts that would use it.

  • Ebooks: I use Calibre locally and Calibre-web on the server (read-only metadata db, I overwrite with the Calibre version as tagging, etc is far easier on desktop).

    You can connect Koreader to Calibre-web and until maybe a fortnight ago you could jailbreak a Kindle and use Koreader instead of the default software. Now you'll need to manually move files over, or use the email-to-Kindle option (probably a bad idea, but I expect Amazon can tell if you've side loaded pirated content anyway). Nowadays I buy from not-Amazon sources, strip any DRM and send it over.

    Manga/comics/graphic novels: I use Kavita on the server and I use comictagger on desktop to fix the metadata.

    I'm happy to use different set ups for the different types as they're quite different experiences and specialist tools work better.

  • Look at bottom centre

    Edit: I'm getting upvotes but I'm not technically in the right here...

  • datahoarder @lemmy.ml

    Lost Doctor Who episodes found – but owner is reluctant to hand them to BBC

    Programmer Humor @programming.dev

    Bingo