I read that some people on here go about it by blocking accounts that are repeatedly toxic. I like this approach since it directly improves your own feed and if a lot of people do it with time the reduced exposure these accounts get could improve the platform as a whole.
I did take all my notes for university on pen and paper because I don't have a laptop with a touchscreen and pen. But I was never quite happy, since I would lose some notes or not find something specific that I knew I wrote down somewhere. This semester I tried using Obsidian and I and it has been great so far. I am now able to search my notes by text and I can back them up somewhere safe. When I'm not on my laptop I take quick notes on my phone but the important ones will then later be transferred to Obsidian.
Since switching to Lemmy I use my up/downvote in a different way than on reddit. Upvote now means I think the comment/post contributes something valuable while downvote means the comment/post is unnecessarily unfriendly or just not contributing anything constructive.
But that's why federation is great. If you don't like how one instance handles stuff you can move to any other instance that suits you or even host your own.
Don't know if it really is the favourite one since I like a lot of cars but the Alpine A110 is definitely close to the top. It just embodies everything that I think a car should aim to be. Light, inexpensive, great handling, good looking.
I don't know a lot about running instances and the federation system but I think companies who operate search engines could create their own instances where they decide who to federate with and then use their instances to look for information. That shouldn't be too difficult and they can create custom systems that suit them best. I don't think it's the users job to do that and until that happens the users of Lemmy should just focus on generating good content.
Yeah and then in the next section they reveal that you have to use to official Reddit app to even be able to do anything with your points. It's a joke.
I've never player truth or dare but I never wanted to because I didn't want to tell people I hardly know very personal stuff. Not that long ago I learned that people apparently frequently lie while playing it, but honestly why are you playing it then?
When talking about code though I've come to notice that it will happily follow the corrections you tell it whether they are right or wrong. That's not all that helpful but it can still give you ideas about how to solve your problem with a bit of basic knowledge of the topic you're dealing with.
Not really, since I went back once or twice but then realised how little value I get from there and how much time I waste there. I also try to reduce my time on lemmy but at least everything is new and fresh here.
I was scrolling the deep sea site and at over 2000m I was not expecting to see any mammals and then at 2400m there was the Elephant Seal. I'd have never thought that those massive blobs of animal can do such amazing things.
Haven't seen Inkscape here yet. I use it for almost every image editing thing I regularly do like cropping, stitching together, adding text and of course creating graphics from scratch.
maybe your taste buds are just different to most people and much more sensitive to onion flavor