Just passing by, but also wanted to appreciate all the mods working, beehaw and others. I used to moderate a small forum years ago and I can feel the stress just by scrolling through the modlog.
Suppose someone sent you a lemmy link like this: lemmy.example.com/post/12345.
Now, you have an account on another instance called lemmy.test, also logged in and want to comment. But opening the original link lemmy.example.com/post/12345 still treats you as being unlogged, because it looks logins from lemmy.example.com, not lemmy.test or any other federated instances.
The solution, for now, is to use the search* function from your instance (lemmy.test) by pasting the original link (lemmy.example.com/post/12345). That gives you a URL that's compatible with your login inside your own instance: lemmy.test/post/98765.
You can do this (or rather, have to do this) with communities or user links too.
I heard there are browser extensions doing this automatically, but haven't tried. Mobile apps should have better support.
Edit: I remember being able to do this but now its not working. Perhaps something changed? I recommend using browser extensions or mobile apps that should take care of this automatically.
Thanks for the advice. I saw a doctor today and he suggested doing some exams to narrow down the possibilities. Also got a prescription for a drug "in case I really needed", but I suppose I should try with improving my sleep quality first.
Having their own instance as a public organization adds more legitimacy to their publications. Think of government officials using the organizations domains for email instead of gmail.
Much better to be able to laugh to ourselves and show awareness of the matter. I never liked when people used membership of a community as a badge of honor, 'redditor' included.
We need to see the whole context here. We are the ones who grew up watching how corporation's advertisement-driven and centralized model of internet took over the wild west that was before the 2000s. Internet access wasn't widespread before that and it consisted of many separate and independent websites, each ran by its owner, with a small but tight community of people, usually around their own forum.
It's a "going back to the internet's roots" kind of movement. Thus, self-hosting (as it used to be) and decentralization (while also introducing modern innovations such as ActivitiesPub) is romanticized. And because Lemmy has only recently started growing in popularity, we are at the stage where there is a plethora of selfhosted small instances in a chaotic way. It's like watching solar system formation in an astronomical scale - first you have the matter spread out everywhere but most eventually concentrate around big spheres. I presume the same will happen here too, but the Federation model we're adopting will also leave the door for small scale independent communities to thrive too.
Question about Unihertz phone, does the model you're using support phone call recording? It's usually an option inside Phone > Settings along blocking numbers, but some android phones simply don't have it enabled.
Talk to anyone in latin america, you must use whatsapp. There's no avoiding it. Some have tried Telegram a while ago, but most have reverted back to their usual whatsapp or facebook messenger. It's crazy.
I want to, but communication is nearly impossible without messaging apps. Everything around here is done through whatsapp. I don't like it, I limit permissions and open it only once or twice a day, but there's no avoiding it.
(And no, SMS isn't free like in the US. Sorry guys.)
I remember trying to setup matrix bridges using these exact repositories a while ago!
So if this company does the dirty job behind like server management and brings it nicely packaged as product, I'm fine with this. I'm tired of having to install more than 2-3 apps (lots of families abroad) just to communicate.
Not everyone here uses the actual dual slot. Some are single sim model variants advertised as dual sim, or one of the slotz have their imei on a blacklist.