I also think that his meme "Change my mind" shouldn't live on through Calvin. We can get the point across without keeping any of the Crowder-created bits.
I think there should be tags for communities and separately, tags for posts within a community.
But I am thinking of Reddit's style of tags, where they are not used like Mastodon, they are just used to identify a general topic or classification of a post within a community.
The idea would be to give end users more information they can use to filter posts or communities, rather than to help people discover posts.
Sometimes it's intentional. I have seen both of these cases as well:
If you copy text, the page secretly adds more text at the end saying "To read more, visit " so when you paste the text, it shares the article too.
Some pages seem to interfere with selecting text on purpose. Like once again, they don't want you copying text, they want you to link the whole article.
I'm pretty sure that she was ultimately found out when Bones pointed out "Wait a minute, I've seen him act impulsively and unexpectedly before, but he's red-faced and hysterical right now, and that's weird!"
You are reading tutorials to help you get it up and running. Most of the time these are designed to walk you through setting things up on a fresh node, and most often just VMs on an isolated (trusted) network. When you are providing a guide to just get someone up and running, the first thing to do is establish a known baseline configuration to start from.
Kubernetes is a complex distributed application, and as such, the audience is generally expected to be relatively experienced. Meaning if you don't know how to configure your firewall, people assume you aren't going through this tutorial.
Still, I feel your pain. When trying to get into these technologies, most people who have done the work are engineers, and we stink at writing documentation. I'm sure you're familiar with it, we automate the solutions for issues we encounter, and then those tools or automatic configurations fail to make it to the end user.
And I'm probably biased, but don't use a video guide for this sort of thing. It's just the wrong medium for a technical tutorial.
As a beginner, don't bother trying to dual boot -- If you still need a Windows box, get some cheap hardware to do your Linux work on. It's too easy to screw up both systems otherwise.
Don't get too hung up on a specific distro, the better you are at dealing with different configurations, the better prepared you will be for whatever comes. Once you've gotten one set up, don't be afraid to just try a different one.
For me it's been the people trying to turn this into a carbon copy of their Reddit experience. I get the desire to fill the void after leaving Reddit, but this is a different place with a different group of people and a different social dynamic. We don't need copies of the subreddits we had on Reddit. We don't need separate communities for every type of meme or joke like we had over there (yet). Creating niche communities is a little premature when we don't even have the larger ones reading critical mass yet.
And to a much lesser degree, I would like to stop seeing people say "sublemmy." But at least I understand how we got there. "Community" is such a generic term, it's easy to not realize that's what they're called.
While post-acute withdrawal syndrome has been reported by those in the recovery community, there have been few scientific studies supporting its existence outside of protracted benzodiazepine withdrawal.[8] [9] Because of this, the disorder is not recognized by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders[10] or major medical associations.
Maybe not a joke, but it doesn't sound like it's taken very seriously
I don't watch any YouTube personalities or subscribe to channels. If I'm on YouTube, it's to see a specific music video, informational video, or something linked by a friend
In short, if I'm not specifically looking for a video, I don't need or want one recommended to me.
Nah, Voyager is primarily a pwa that works entirely in your phone's browser.
They recently packaged it with a browser into an APK because lots of users asked for a "native app" for some reason. But the pwa is still there, and is still the main way it is developed
But no front end for Lemmy should ever need to be an app.
Where does subspace fall on this line? Stargates? The TARDIS?
Sometimes the science is magical. The line is pretty fuzzy