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2 yr. ago

  • If you're missing Reddit, here, I'll give you that fix...

    "I don't know what you're talking about. All my posts get 14million+ replies. Git gud."

    "Ackshully, what you're calling Lemmy is the server software, which is only a part of the ActivityPub protocol... (4 paragraphs of technical stuff)."

    "And my Axe!"

    "Wait, what's a Lemmy?"

    "Have you considered that these feelings might be a sign of depression? I took half a semester of a psychology class in college and..."

    "Bro, don't doubt yourself. Fuck the haters."

    "Bro, you doubt yourself because you know it's true. Get alpha."

    "I thought this too, but then I got (some worthless product) and it fixed everything! I'm not affiliated in the sense that it is my product."

    "You could post to both! Step 1: Post to Reddit. Step 2: Post to Lemmy. Step 3: ... Step 4: Profit!"

    "Man, this sub doesn't stick to its own rules. He doesn't even mention federation. Someone ban this clown!"

    "I am so insulted by this that I'm unsubbing, throwing my computer out the window, building a rocket, and flying off to Mars."

    "I am so insulted by all these replies that I'm unsubbing, throwing..."

    "Oh no! I have too many social media platforms to post on!" There are kids dying from space-based lasers all across the world. Talk about first world problems..."

    "Hey I think this is the thing that is in more of for every in the past inside."

    Feeling better?

  • That's what I started on (well, a knock off clone) and I still say it's a great printer if you want to learn 3D printing.

    Now, if you want to actually print right after buying, no no no. Not a good fit.

    It's basically a set of parts that can be cheaply replaced, but measured properly (mostly) and lets you avoid putting together a BOM. Plus, there are tons of them out there, so lots of community support and many cheap, occasionally working, 3rd party upgrades.

    I feel like it taught me the mindset of FDM troubleshooting and how the parts/variables interacted with each other. It was $150 a few years ago, so it's great for screwing up and figuring out what you want in your first real printer. It also has a lot of potential and folks that have modded them to actually run well, so it helped me figure out where I fell on the "It just works" to "Let's test these 200 different hotend fan duct designs" spectrum and which features were most important to me.

  • I don't WANT to agree, but I kinda do.

    We're here because Reddit was shit on top shit, led by gaping anus. We all accept that Meta is the same.
    We didn't want Reddit profiting from our work. Meta will do the same, only more competently.

    Defederation is useless at scale They can continually spin up new instances that act as spies and bridges to Meta's area.
    Once enough Meta bridge nodes are woven into the Fedi, they'll be masked by a backchannel to mask the exchange/activity.

    Someone plz tell me I'm wrong, but this is how I think things work in the background...

    • Bob creates a Lemmy node - @Zucc1.ughfuckoff. It has 3 users and basically shops around until someone in lemmy.world's sphere allows federation. Zucc1 looks like any random, small instance.
    • Once federated, Zucc1 syncs to its connected Lemmy instances - for now there is no Meta connection.
    • Zucc1 can then federate with a bunch of other instances, including Zucc2.
    • This repeats for a few weeks, infiltrating Fedi. This could be happening now.
    • A new set of Lemmy nodes spin up and federate only with a portion of the spy instances. The spy instances don't respect the federation rules, distributing portions of the Fedi sync back to the Meta connected nodes, masking the source and destination.
    • Once signed posts are received by the spy nodes, user names are swapped with a table synced by spy and bridge instances. @User1@T4server.threads becomes @User7@Zucc4.ughfuckoff.

    Probably easy to combat when it's one instance here and there. If it's constant and automated, federating would have to be paused until the spies are weeded out and there's a better detection strategy. If they get a big enough network going, they could all dip out at once, change identity, and refederate back in as the Fedi network flips out because of all the sync mismatches. Just more new nodes joining in. They have the source code, so they can act differently from other instances as long as it doesn't cause problems.

    Is this a realistic scenario or am I way off base? I feel like it has to be one of the two.

  • Yes, you're printing on Hard Mode. PETG is weird at first, but easy-ish later on. Some veterans tend to treat it like no big deal, but it can be a real stumbling block for some. I know it took me a while.

  • My point is that this argument makes as much sense as what I wrote, so it's encouraging the you think it's ridiculous.

    "Versus" is a valueless delineation separating two subjects. There are two groups: The people of the Fediverse and the people not in the Fediverse. Neither one is good or bad, and in fact, many are a part of BOTH. That self awareness cancels any perceived negativity. We're all probably some level of "normie," and I've never heard someone use that word without immediate laughter by all parties. Sure, maybe in the early 00s by grade school punks, but I don't think anyone does or should care.

    The point you're actually making, without articulating it well, is the lack of terminology for federated groups. No one wants to say, "I'm a member of a select federated Lemmy and Kbin instances within the larger Fediverse." You want an affirmative set of terms, so that delineation can be made; you want to say, "The X have this, and the not(X) have that." From there you can get to value judgements, based on the expression of X, and I'll recognize your concerns. The ridiculousness of those terms not existing makes it VERY hard to claim intentional negativity/harm because it simultaneously draws attention that group X in this case doesn't have their shit together enough to come up with a nickname or shorthand.

    "You're better than us? What are you?"
    "Well, you see, I'm a part of a federated network of...."
    (Looks up - everyone left)

    So, until someone comes up with some non-super-cringe terms for this wonderful mess, the discussion is a waste of everyone's time. And until then, I suggest taking it on a case by case basis. If someone is offended, tell them that's not intended because we don't have OUR shit together, ask them what they prefer, and use that term around them.

  • I 100% agree that word is cringe and I'm totally into the fediverse for the long haul, but we have to address the pachyderm in the room: The word "Fediverse" is just as cringe.

    I, ... I'm sorry. I can read it in a document, but the second a human being types it, I can't take it seriously. I don't care if folks want to shorten it to something like the FI (Federated Instances). Yes, there are other uses of the word "federate", but it immediately sounds like a federal intraweb domain or a group of Star Trek policy makers.

    "Fediverse" is "netizen 2.0."
    "Fediverse" is "cruising on the information superhighway Pro."
    Please tell me I'm not alone in thinking this.

  • No no no, it's stereotyping and prejudice when OTHER people do it to US. WE should tell THEM that THEY are US, and by saying this to OURSELVES we have said it to THEM, so that WE know that THEY know, but now THEY are a THEM again.

    YOU don't get it. WE get it. YOU should all be like US where there is no YOU and US, there is only the WE that is YOU and US, but thereis no YOU and US, there is only the WE that is YOU and US, but thereis no YOU and US, there is only the WE that is YOU and US, but thereis no YOU and US, there is only the WE that is YOU and US.

    Simple. See? You don't? But, YOU must because there is no...

  • So you're saying there are people who DO use "normies" and people that DON'T use "normies". These are not two groups of people. Shit, I just joined this thread, so that makes ME one of YOU, and there's OTHERS that aren't here. Are WE the elitists? Or are THEY the "normies"? YOU said there's no there's no US or THEM, so EVERYONE is talking in this thread. ANYONE not in this thread must not exist because I know I exist, so YOU thread posters must exist, but wait, that makes ME an US and YOU a THEM.

    (I'm not trying to be snarky, but this argument is exactly as nonsensical.)

  • I've tried to warn people about them. I got a 10 pack early on while learning and it almost made me give up the hobby. Classic n00b mistakes? Some, but after I set that filament aside in a drybox, I had almost no problems. The only mistakes I made with those other brands were due to strategies I developed to rescue prints from IIIDMax's garbage. I must have used 10-20 other brands over the next year, revisiting the cursed spools occasionally.

    I thought I could relegate the leftovers to my 3D pen. Somehow that satan-spawned plastic jammed it up. The pen is basically a soldering iron, a motor, and 2 gears. I've fed strips of PETG bottles cut by hand through it. The filament wasn't precise enough for my no precision 3D pen.

  • Oh, you poor thing. I made the same mistake. I know, I know, PETG logically makes the most sense - no fumes, higher temp tolerance, cheap - but save yourself weeks of misery and stick with PLA or PLA Plus/Pro/+ for a few months. PETG is a special beast. For all the shit PLA gets, it's not that bad and MUCH easier to learn printing with.

    PETG is more viscous and sticky, and generally requires its own z-offset tuning and retraction tweaks. On top of that, it needs juuuuust enough heat to melt the Bowden tube, which happens to make it really tempting to pop a few prints. I'm pretty sure I invented new curse words while trying to clean out that mess.

    PETG was the second filament I tried. The first was Silk PLA. It's PLA, but shiny, no biggie, right? Don't learn on Silk PLA either. Completely different set of problems. Silk PLA to PLA is like Frosted Fakes to cake frosting.

    Just my $0.02. I know I was all excited to print mods for the printer right away, but I've ended up replacing all those mods with MUCH better ones 6 months later. Good luck!

    Edit: Forgot to mention, make sure you use glue stick or hairspray on the bed. PETG will bond strong enough to take some of the bed surface with it!

  • Suuuure. Just like you totally have a girlfriend you met at summer camp in Canada. Bummer she's not allowed to be near any electronics.

    Only one of those two things can be real, and I've met a Canadian.

  • "I don't mean to spez, but I don't agree..." (I'm not trying to be an asshole, but...)

    "Lemmy say..." (my opinion is...)

    "And L'Emmy for best performance goes to..." (praise a good comment)

    "Let me provide a cool glass of Lemmy-aid for you." (I'm giving a friendly bit of unsolicited advice.)

    "Quite the CaLemmyTea!" (A big disagreement or negative event (catastrophe) that ended in a surprisingly civil way (like over a good cup of tea.))

  • It might be worth noting that the platform is stable, but still growing. Expect little quirks; we're dealing with a big influx of new users.

    For example, I joined during the first big wave of signups and the servers were having trouble keeping up with the sudden spike in activity (10 to 1000x+ new posts/users/instances). I would sometimes see federated content, sometimes not. After 12 hours and a massive effort by the devs, everything became MUCH more stable.

    There will be bugs, but they are actively being squashed at breakneck speed.

    For example, one that I encounter regularly is leaving a thread open in a background tab too long (on Firefox) eventually stops syncing with the server. When I eventually get to that tab, the data is old and attempting to interact (click arrows, reply, subscribe, etc.) send me to an error page. The fix? Refresh the page if was open more that 30 minutes ago. It's a minor bug that will eventually be fixed, so give it time.


    I also wanted to throw some advice out there, in case it's useful...

    If they're ever confused, there are plenty of support communities/magazines. First, check if others have posted about the same problem. If they haven't, feel free to ask. The NoStupidQuestions community hosts a ton of simple Fediverse-related questions posted by users, and it has some of the highest engagement on the platform. I know the reluctance of posting may have been ground into you by Reddit, but (a) this isn't Reddit, and (b) we're all new here.

    There is a slight learning curve, so canoodle around a bit to get a feel for this new Reddit-esque multiverse. Read a few FAQs, skim the support communities, follow a few rabbit holes.

    Here's what I suspect is a semi-normal new user experience (because it was mine :) ):

    • To start, you'll want to register an account, so you do. You'll click a few stories, try to comment, and find you're not logged in and can't log in. You'll notice you're not on the original server. Do you have to register a million accounts? That makes no sense! The answer is no.
    • Next, you'll want to understand why. That post you clicked took you to another instance (think of them as servers). So, how do you post a comment on another instance? Ah, from your home instance. So, did it matter where I registered? Yes and no, but mostly no.
      • Keep going down the account rabbit hole and you'll read about the pros and cons of running your own instance, how federation/defederation works, and other instance-related topics,
      • Or, hop back out and proceed to comment on the post you read. Wait. My comment has no votes. The path forks again.
        • Is there something like Reddit's karma system? Down the voting/rep rabbit hole!
        • Is it considered bad form to vote for my own comment/post? (There's no consensus right now, so don't worry.) Down the Lemmy/Kbin etiquette rabbit hole!

    You'll eventually go back to hit on those forks in the path you didn't take. Follow whichever path suits you best and expand from there.

  • I'm generally a Windows user, but on the verge of doing a trial run of Fedora Silverblue (just need to find the time). It sounds like a great solution to my.. complicated... history with Linux.

    I've installed Linux dozens of times going back to the 90s (LinuxPPC anyone? Yellow Dog?), and I keep going back to Windows because I tweak everything until it breaks. Then I have no idea how I got to that point, but no time to troubleshoot. Easily being able to get back to a stable system that isn't a fresh install sounds great.