This a great answer in a sea of slightly odd food choices. It’s healthy for kids to do this, apparently.
It’s nice here, but a bit under-federated. Other @Deebster
s are available.
This a great answer in a sea of slightly odd food choices. It’s healthy for kids to do this, apparently.
I think part of the problem is that even when you’re subscribed to the small communities, it’s easy to miss the posts. Sorting by Scaled helps a little, but I still often find a post from days ago that I missed.
I’d like an option where you could “super subscribe” or something which makes those posts show up first, or even in the inbox.
I’ve enjoyed what I’ve done with it so far, which is mostly little wasm projects. Once they finally get a proper editor I think it’ll really pick up adopters.
No, it’ll be fine 99% of the time.
Nowadays, feature detection is done within browsers, and the differences between browsers are small enough that servers generally will serve the same version of a page to all.
Ah, ok, that makes more sense. That also solves any ordering problem if you, say, you’re running local and elsewhere commands and a sync means pressing up gives you an unexpected item.
Sync seems like it’s going to be more pain than its worth unless you have all your machines configured the same. I’m not even running the same distros between machines…
I’ve just installed this from your recommendation and it’s brilliant. I love the amateur graphics, it just adds to the charm.
Agreed - it’s 25 minutes without filler or repetition. Good stuff.
I’m not sure what you’re asking. Do you mean Lemmy communities, Lemmy instances, or something else?
Bad link 👎
This article seems to be an incomplete pasting of an old article: What Did Ada Lovelace’s Program Actually Do? I was suspicious when it said “A contemporary interpretation of Ada’s punch card stack using JavaScript might resemble the following” but didn’t have any code.
The real tl;dr is it calculated terms of the Bernoulli series.
If you’re on Windows, you can use Win
+ .
If you’re on Linux, try ctrl
+ shift
+ e
I’m surprised you say you don’t know what the 😭 face means, since it’s just exaggerated crying. Is it because they’re too small, or that you suspect there’s some implied agreement/subtext you’re not party to?
I can see why people wouldn’t know what something like 🍆 is used to represent, since it’s not for the intended (I assume…) use.
I thought that was catchier than “Private Browsing/Incognito/InPrivate/gift shopping mode”.
It’s not paywalled here, try using porn mode, clearing that site’s cookies or something like archive.today.
I’d agree that you can’t binge on them - best to just read one in between longer books.
I’m another Kagi fan - after customising it a little it’s just so good, and I haven’t even played with features like lenses.
I really like the custom bang searches (e.g. I could make !ks gravity
search on simple Wikipedia), especially on mobile since Firefox Android doesn’t support the normal browser quicksearches (where you set a keyword for each search).
That’s interesting. The flaw with that logic seems to that there’ll always be new users, and they’ll be playing on hard mode since those vital clues have been removed.
Online it’s even more annoying (to me, anyway), because we have the time element specifically for this kind of thing and no-one bothers to use it.
After a glance at others’ answers, it’s the same thing: the trend away from skeuomorphism.
I always think about the time I discovered an Android area was horizontally scrollable - with no scrollbars to clue me in, it was only the fact that the icon I wanted wasn’t there that prompted me to discover the secret. I’m a software dev, if it’s unintuitive even to me, how do non-technical people stand a chance?
Arguably, the fix should be to “it” since anon is a utility account, not a user.