Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)CE
Posts
0
Comments
164
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Maybe if we reduced the number of wheels to two and made them skinny it would also help. Since it’s light, we could probably move it with our own power instead of an engine.

    The benefit is that we would also get some fresh air and exercise.

    I hope something like this gets invented some day but I suppose one can only dream.

  • I chose this instance due to the noticeably better performance at the time which seems to ultimately boil down to you having your shit together running the server. However, I do also prefer this hands off approach to federation.

    For those who have so much trouble with content, I recommend moving to beehaw which I understand to be a safe space.

  • Definitely give Debian a shot, there are just so many more, up-to-date resources available due to the popularity. Handles great out of the box and is super stable.

    I use Ubuntu in the cloud, Raspbian for my home server and Ubuntu via WSL on my PC. So, all headless, I’m actually still looking for a desktop environment that I would prefer to Windows (which is slowing devolving…)

    This post reminded me of getting free distribution CDs in the mail back in the day.

  • The data that you entered into lemmy is stored: username, password, email (optionally), posts, comments, etc. Assume instances keep logs of all the API requests they get from any given IP. This is the case with nearly every website.

    If you don’t provide email and lurk then I don’t see much of a concern. You can always use a VPN if you want more anonymity.

  • I think this will ultimately be solved by 3rd party clients.

    There are tons of mobile apps in the pipeline and some already released. I just got set up with Memmy a couple days ago and it already makes things a bit easier; a step in the right direction.

    On desktop I imagine browser plugins helping to tie the experience a bit more together. Hopefully the vanilla UI can also deal with cross-instance behaviour down the road.