Mmmm. It's the instance that people are on on that's doing (or not doing) much of the work there. If you comment on a post, the instance will send 1 copy to me (who's responsible for federating it out to other Lemmy instances) and 1 copy to Mastodon for the post's author.
If you reply to a Lemmy comment, it doesn't send it to Mastodon because it's not for the author (in much the same way that you don't get replies to replies in your inbox if you're the OP of a Lemmy post). For local posts, both Mastodon and Lemmy show the local comment tree, but neither can show every Fediverse interaction because they never hear about them.
Likewise, if you reply to a Mastodon comment, your instance will send it to the comment author, but not the post author, so won't appear anywhere under their post.
As for Mastodon comments on Lemmy ... it depends. I follow some accounts, so when I post them to Lemmy, top-level comments come through automatically (again, though, I never hear about replies to replies). Other content is just stuff I've seen and grabbed. I often post the existing replies, but not if they've turned Authorized Fetch on, and I don't typically go back and check for more later.
They can, yes. The lemmy instance that a particular user is on handles that. This community is mostly about getting the posts and comments into lemmy in the first place.
You seem to like David Fincher a lot. It's a shame that 'Girl with the Dragon Tattoo' is 2011, I suppose.
This kind of thing is something that algorithms are better at than people - the resources are there, so you may as well use them.
Anyway, a well-regarded but often forgotten (by me at least) recommendation: Dead Man's Shoes (2004). (don't Google it beforehand though). Trailer: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=hChf0hmh0fM
Lol, no. I've decided that they should be exclusively referred to as Tails OS (they've yet to formally agree).
The name comes it being a Community that follows People (so flipping the usual relationship in a heads/tails kinda way, but also tail as a synonym for follow).
You seem to have stumbled into the Man-O-Sphere. They win when young men watch them, they win when others bring them up to discuss how terrible they are. I shouldn't even know who 'Tate' is.
Part of the problem is how much wider on average cars have got, making it less viable to park next to the curb or with just 2 wheels on it. Another part is that both members of a couple are more likely to be working and needing separate cars, and if their kids can't afford to move away, than that's an extra car too. Additionally, councils have convinced themselves that not lowering carbs to allow for extra driveways is promoting public transport use, ignoring how unviable that often is.
Cars with all 4 wheels on the pavement annoy me, but it's become so normalised that drivers have looked at me, like me walking on the pavement is an irritating obstruction to where they have every right to be. I think the police in some areas allow you to upload a photo to report them, but it's not something I'd do 'cos it's a complex problem and fines aren't the solution.
My way around this is to use ngrok.com, which is a quick and simple way to create a temporary VPN with a domain and SSL. On the free plan your domain changes often, which will break federation every time you reconnect.
You can now get 1 free static url with ngrok's free plan. The 'free' part of it is that it needs relaunching after a certain period of time (every 2 days, maybe?) but it works well enough to develop things.
The short answer is that you have to ask blahaj.zone to resolve it. lemmy.ml has it as post id 11470168, but it'll be different for other instances - whatever the next number was in their database when the post was announced.
You get different answers depending on whether you're logged in or not though.
From endlesstalk.org, I can search for that post in the web-ui: Communities -> paste the post url into Search -> Change the Type from 'communities' to 'posts'
Alternatively, using the API, I can resolve it with curl --header 'accept: application/json' --header 'authorization: Bearer MY_LOGIN_TOKEN' https://endlesstalk.org/api/v3/resolve_object?q=https://lemmy.ml/post/11470168
I'm not logged into blahaj.zone though, so it won't resolve it. The web-ui only gives me this post as one that mentions the thing I'm searching for, and the API returns 'not found'
Replayed Uncharted 4 for the millionth time. Now on The Lost Legacy. Not enjoying it as much (it's harder, for one thing). Interesting to see the developments that would go into The Last of Us 2 though (e.g. experiments with more open-world levels, and the attempt to redeem a character that's previously been portrayed as a villain).
I think it's difficult to know where we really are in the release cycle for this console, as it's been disrupted so much by initial unavailability and COVID. Normally, we'd be due a Pro version this year, but it could be this year, it could be next year, it could be never.
Last generation I was happy with a standard PS4 until I played Control, and could see that it was struggling. I'm not sure there's any PS5 games that are known to stress the hardware, and would do anything with the extra resources.
I'd buy one now if I were you. Worse case scenario: you'll want to trade it in for an upgrade in a year or two.
Use the pi or whatever little computer that's presumably hosting the pi-hole software to also be a DHCP server (and turn off the DHCP server on ISP's router). It can then advertise itself as the DNS server.
Mmmm. It's the instance that people are on on that's doing (or not doing) much of the work there. If you comment on a post, the instance will send 1 copy to me (who's responsible for federating it out to other Lemmy instances) and 1 copy to Mastodon for the post's author.
If you reply to a Lemmy comment, it doesn't send it to Mastodon because it's not for the author (in much the same way that you don't get replies to replies in your inbox if you're the OP of a Lemmy post). For local posts, both Mastodon and Lemmy show the local comment tree, but neither can show every Fediverse interaction because they never hear about them.
Likewise, if you reply to a Mastodon comment, your instance will send it to the comment author, but not the post author, so won't appear anywhere under their post.
As for Mastodon comments on Lemmy ... it depends. I follow some accounts, so when I post them to Lemmy, top-level comments come through automatically (again, though, I never hear about replies to replies). Other content is just stuff I've seen and grabbed. I often post the existing replies, but not if they've turned Authorized Fetch on, and I don't typically go back and check for more later.