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kbin.life

JesusTheCarpenter , to nostupidquestions in How are lemmy and other fediverse platforms profitable?

I don't know the answer.

Hell ,
@Hell@lemmy.world avatar

Neither do I. I just wrote this just so lemmy counts me as an active user

eskimofry ,

Haha ok.. but lurking is fine. I don't think we shoulf pressure new comers.

Mateja23 ,

I don't know the answer more than you.

kinther , to nostupidquestions in How are lemmy and other fediverse platforms profitable?
@kinther@lemmy.world avatar

I'm donating $5 to the Lemmy devs and $5 to Lemmy.world currently on patreon.

ElectroVagrant , to nostupidquestions in What do I do with the !community@instance links?

You want to go to the search bar at the top and search NoStupidQuestions then limit to communities/local, at least for communities on your instance.

You can also search !NoStupidQuestions from there and it should work, but you have to give it a second to show the search results. A weird, silly issue is that if you try to search from the communities page, it automatically narrows your search to communities, and for whatever reason that doesn't recognize the !NoStupidQuestions style nor urls from what I've found.

You have to switch the search settings to search all for it to recognize either of those styles.

marcos OP ,

I'm interested on how I search for specific communities in other instances.

I guess my question could have been more clear on that.

ElectroVagrant ,

Similar idea as what I wrote, but instead of limiting to communities/local, you leave both as All when using the search bar at the top. For specific remote communities, if someone on your instance has searched for them before, then you may just need to search as [email protected], for example: [email protected].

If someone on your instance hasn't searched for the community yet, then you would need to copy the url for the community into the search (with it set to all both in type and scope) and do it that way, for example: https://lemmy.ml/c/asklemmy

Unfortunately, to know of these at all, you typically have to go to the remote instance itself and look through the communities there are on their community page, or someone from a remote instance has to post to a community in your instance telling you about them. Otherwise unless someone else in your instance has done so & subscribed to them, I don't think they'll show up in the all feed of your instance.

I may be mistaken on this last part, but that's how the community connections work to the best of my understanding.

Murais , to asklemmy in what do you do when you're alone in an elevator
@Murais@lemmy.one avatar

Fart.

bloodfart , to linux in Is Systemd that bad afterall?

Not against systemd (although it’s bad and needs replacing), just against pottering.

Specific_Skunk , to asklemmy in what do you do when you're alone in an elevator

I look around for cameras and if I find one, I stare at it for the whole ride. No one really watches those things unless something is being investigated so on the rare chance someone sees it, I’ll just be an oddity in a much more interesting tale.

Usually I just take the stairs though. I hate surveillance.

Tetsuo666 , to nostupidquestions in How to share my content across Fediverse?

To some extent I think you can do most of that on Lemmy.

You can upload images for your posts (not sure for short videos) and cross-post them to other communities.

Edit: I don't know kbin.social but I suspect it would be more adequate to what you want to do.

tenebrisnox , to books in What other fantasy should I read if I’m obsessed with Lord of the Rings?
@tenebrisnox@feddit.uk avatar

A neglected series is Riverworld by Philip Jose Farmer. There are five volumes that are a great read.

All humanity is resurrected after death on the banks of a strange river. Each book deals with a real historical figure and the struggle to understand the mysteries of Riverworld. Each volume more or less follows characters from history (Richard Burton, Mark Twain, Cyrano de Bergerac and others) who embark on a journey to travel to the end of the River in order to solve the mystery of their resurrection. It’s quite pulpy but very enjoyable.

Minifluff , to gaming in Is it me or are games really not fun anymore

I started avoiding games that make it hard to play without choosing the meta. I look for indie games where solving mysteries about the game made it more interesting. Its not for everyone but it could be a breath of fresh air for anyone looking to get away from games that expect you to play a specific way or to grind for new stuff.

jflesch , to linux in I don't find any value in Red-Hat but I see their corporate thinking. Who really need them and why?
@jflesch@lemmy.kwain.net avatar

I worked for a bank. When they decided to deploy Linux on their infrastructure, they chose RHEL and they have signed a big contract with RedHat for tech support.

Overall, they chose RedHat for the same reason they chose Microsoft before: tech support. They have >10000 engineers, and yet somehow they think they absolutely need tech support… They pay a lot for it. In my building, they even got a Microsoft engineer once a week on-site until Covid. I don’t know for the other people working for this bank, but I asked for Microsoft support only once in 2 years. In the end, their guy sent me back an email telling me “I’ve transmitted your question to the corresponding engineering team” and … diddlysquat.

Now to be fair, for paying customers, RHEL and Microsoft both ensure security updates for a really a long time. Red Hat pays a lot of people to backport security patches from upstream to previous versions. It allows companies like the bank I worked for to keep running completely crappy and obsolete software for an insane amount of time without having to worry too much about security vulnerabilities.

Anyway regarding RedHat contributions, a lot of them are subtle.

  • A friend of mine works for RedHat. He is a core Python developer and is paid full-time by RedHat to work on Python.
  • Through this friend, I applied for a position in their company at some point (unfortunately, it didn’t happen ; don’t remember why exactly). The position was in a team dedicated to improve hardware support. They have built an infrastructure to let computer manufacturers (Dell, Lenovo, etc) test the compatibility of their new hardware with Linux/RHEL quickly and automatically.
  • Part of the technical support they provide to some clients is “making things work”. It may imply fixing bugs or improving drivers and then sending patches upstream.
  • If I’m not mistaken, they paid Lennart Poettering to work on Systemd and Pulseaudio.
  • They pay for the development of some infrastructure software like Corosync for instance.

This list is far from exhaustive. I’m sure they have paid for a lot of other things you’re using daily without knowing it.

the16bitgamer , to books in eReader recommendations?

An eReader that doesn’t lock you into a format doesn’t mean much when ebooks from Google, Kobo and Amazon locks you into their DRM.

But let’s say you happen to strip the drm find a DRM free source of ebooks like on Humble Bundle and want an eReader and are looking for options.

From looking into myself you have a few options depending on the screen.

eInk:

  • Kobo (Clara 2e/HD)
  • Android eInk tablet (Onyx Boox/Boyue)

LCD:

  • Android Tablet (with KO Reader)
  • iPad (mini)
  • spyware fire tablet

For ease of use the Kobo is probably the best if you are just looking for something the integrates well with everything. But you will need Calibre on a host PC to store and manage your library since Kobo doesn’t do that for you.

iPad would be my second choice mainly because of the native apps for each drm. If you dont want to use the native apps, tutorials are limited but the Book app can read any ePub well, and you can sync books with iCloud. That said if you don’t want iCloud its a pain in the but todisabled, but iTunes can be used to manually add books to the Book app (or adobe digital editions)

Android is the most flexible but takes more work. A Samsung tablet will be the easiest to buy and run. And each eBook store does have a native app. That said DRM free is where Android shines, KOReader is a fabulous eReader app that supports so much that even the eInk android devices use it. The GUI isn’t the best but its functionality is the best.

This also applies to android eink as well. However do not expect software support more than what’s already installed. For a phone/tablet this would be a killer (have a likebook stuck on Android 4 with a dead play store) however since ebooks are offline the devices are still usable. If you want anything official… Good luck.


Amazon

While you will see a general consensus that Fire Tablets and Kindles should be avoided I have looked into them and this is my two cents on them.

Kindle - are surprising more usable then a Kobo without an account, but the majority of its features are locked out if you don’t have an account. With Calibre you can convert ePubs to Amazon’s format since they are rebadged ePubs and the Kindle will read it even if you are not signed in. However I personally don’t like the amount of work is needed to use it beyond what Amazon wants you to use it for. And especially out side of the USA the lack of Audio book functionality is irritating.

Fire Tablet - is the most useful of the Amazon devices. It can be used without an account with a lot of work and diligence during the checkout. Since its an Android Tablet you can install all but Googles DRM and even then Adobe Digital editions works on it. SD card storage upgrades are a nice bonus too for comics lovers or audiobooks fans. But you will be missing features until you sign in.

And here’s the thing, you may want an Amazon device, logged in since you will have a Serial Number which maybe used to “improve” the usability of your Amazon ebooks on non Amazon devices. Especially when the old gen of tablets go on sale. 😉

Glide , to asklemmy in what do you do when you're alone in an elevator

…wait?

Guys, it’s like, 30 seconds. Stop, breath.

ampersandrew , to gaming in Is it me or are games really not fun anymore
@ampersandrew@kbin.social avatar

I understand where you're coming from when you look at the games with the most marketing, but we also live in the age of Minecraft, not to mention the countless games and genres it inspired. The stuff you're looking for is out there.

glarf , to android in What's your lemmy app of choice?

Connect for lemmy works great for me so far. Though it doesn't support wide screens very well.

Thekingoflorda , to nostupidquestions in What do I do with the !community@instance links?
@Thekingoflorda@lemmy.world avatar

Does this work? (if yes, I used the link markdown thingy).

cerevant , (edited )

No. This is what I'm seeing your link as:

https://lemmy.world/post/lemmy.world/c/[email protected]

First, /post doesn't work. The FQDN is:

https://lemmy.world/c/[email protected]

However, that will always take you to the lemmy.world website, which if you are a user of lemmy.one (for example) you don't want - you won't be able to comment or post there. If you use a relative path:

/c/[email protected]

It tells the browser to go to that location on whatever server you are currently on. As noted elsewhere, this doesn't work on kbin because they chose to use /m instead of /c. I expect that one or both of Lemmy & Kbin will automatically convert URLs in the future, and will ultimately support the [email protected] form.

edit: Note that the "@lemmy.world" is optional when you are on lemmy.world, but it is the part that will get you to the right place if you use the link on another instance.

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