There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

kbin.life

Zeth0s , to nostupidquestions in If I stop drinking does that decrease risk of cancer?

You drink 3-4 time a year? It would change absolutely nothing for you stopping drinking. Getting cancer is a game of probability. Risk factors increase the probability (do not necessarily cause cancer). Your 4 drinks don’t change anything, don’t worry. Thing is different if you drink 3 drinks a day…

noodlejetski , to technology in Multiplatform RSS reader suggestions

some people might want to avoid Feedly due to their approach to protests: https://hachyderm.io/@molly0xfff/110113208809822962

Retiring , to mildlyinfuriating in Comfort provided by pillow structures
@Retiring@lemmy.ml avatar

I feel you, but where is the question?

bjoern_tantau OP ,
@bjoern_tantau@swg-empire.de avatar

Are you lost?

Retiring ,
@Retiring@lemmy.ml avatar

Haha very much so! I had to downvote my own comment for that. Shame.

jmbreuer , to linux in What was your first experience using Linux? How old were you? Stick around or did you go back to windows before eventually circling back to Linux?
@jmbreuer@lemmy.ml avatar

Heh, this inspires a neat little bio.

I had access to then-usual computer-related stuff growing up as a teenager in the late 80’s/early 90’s (C16, C64, Amiga, DOS/Windows on 286/386). One of the nicer things in that environment was a PostScript capable laser (well, LED) printer. At that time struggling with PageMaker and the likes, the possibilities of a page description language fascinated me.

Later, but still in teenage years, I came across NeXT(STEP) - first through a friend who had one, and its manuals and TeX documents out that PostScript printer like nothing I’d ever seen (done in-house) before. I was hooked. ;-)

A NeXT computer then became my daily driver through “college” and university, where at the time there also were Unix workstations by HP, Sun and SGI. DOS/Windows was all happening at that time, and it always felt to me like the VHS of operating systems - the technically worst implementation taking the market share.

When Linux appeared on the scene, I was obviously interested. The first distro I remember was SLS, followed by SlackWare and Red Hat. Mostly for communication/networking (UUCP, PPP, eMail, Usenet, IP connectivity, …) I started to use Red Hat in 1996, with the NeXT keeping its place for its graphical desktop on my personal desk. At the time I started working for a software startup where we used a mix of Linux (Red Hat) and Windows (NT) desktops, and Linux (Red Hat) mostly for servers (some Sun and BSD as well, IIRC). Around 2002(?) maybe I had mostly migrated to Linux also for my home desktop, but I kept the NeXT around for a long time, most specifically because of Diagram!, a predecessor (in spirit) to OmniGraffle.

Moving to Apple/OS X never sat right with me due to its proprietary, closed-source nature. “It works great when it works. When it doesn’t, you’re even more SOL than on Windows.”

When Red Hat went EOL in 2004 I looked around for alternatives and most seriously tried out gentoo Linux. I love the flexibility of being able to use one distro with consistent paradigms all the way from (almost) embedded through various server configurations to a fully multimedia capable desktop. I haven’t looked back since, typing this into LibreWolf on a KDE Plasma desktop running on gentoo.

All the while, I’ve also been using, supporting, and developing for Windows professionally to some degree (in addition to working for/on Linux and other more Unix-y stuff). It’s such a quality of life hit compared to open source - I remember phone calls with prominent Microsoft employees over weird support cases involving DCOM permissions (or rather, bugs therein) - Microsoft’s reply certainly felt quite like de Maizière’s infamous “some of those answers could unsettle too many people” quote, hinting at security through obscurity.

Whereas in the Linux ecosystem, I can analyze to their root and facilitate taking care of even decidedly weird corner cases.

One thing I still miss a lot from the NeXTSTEP desktop is its concept of “services”: Global utilities that could/would operate on anything (of suitable data type, e.g. text, image) that is currently selected (and show up in what today would amount to the context menu of the selection, regardless of which program it’s in). In the simplest case, this could be a Wikipedia lookup of the currently selected word. But, services also had the ability to replace the selection, allowing for all manner of things like unit conversions, ‘intelligent’ expansion (what this could do together with ChatGPT!), at-the-fingertips OCR and so on and so forth.

slyme , to nostupidquestions in Do you use the swipe to type feature on your phone?
@slyme@lemmy.world avatar

Nope, typing this with buttons on a virtual keyboard right now! I mainly use a desktop for most of the day, so I just prefer using the same system on mobile too.

sub_ , to gaming in Are you an intrinsically or extrinsically motivated gamer?

I’m not a “make my own fun” gamer, and now when I think about it, because all of my “make my own fun” is done outside of gaming, e.g. playing music, coding, 3d printing, drawing, etc.

lemann , to datahoarder in DRM removal tool was taken down from github. If you can, please download it from gitlab before its taken down too

Thanks for this 👍

Seeing as the IA are in court with book publishers, it would make sense for them to try and lessen the legal damage by doing this.

Lifebandit666 , to ukcasual in What are you playing Wednesday

I’ve been playing Sons Of The Forest when I actually get a chance to do a bit of gaming. It’s great but I think I’m gonna have to start keeping 2 saves like in the old days because I find I save, then sleep and always wake up with Cannibals surrounding my camp.

I’ve also played multiplayer on it which is great fun. The 2 of us trading off areas with decent loot that we know of then building a tree house right on the beach next to a river runoff.

Anyway, if you like playing games where you’re constantly scared this one has it in spades.

Lifebandit666 , to ukcasual in What are you playing Wednesday

I’ve been playing Sons Of The Forest when I actually get a chance to do a bit of gaming. It’s great but I think I’m gonna have to start keeping 2 saves like in the old days because I find I save, then sleep and always wake up with Cannibals surrounding my camp.

I’ve also played multiplayer on it which is great fun. The 2 of us trading off areas with decent loot that we know of then building a tree house right on the beach next to a river runoff.

Anyway, if you like playing games where you’re constantly scared this one has it in spades.

LiamMayfair , to linux in What is your go-to Linux distro and why?

Fedora because it’s robust, stable, mature and has a fairly up-to-date package repository. Plus, it has spins (ISO flavours) with different DEs/WMs installed, including i3 and even Sway!

If you want a Linux distro that just works and gets out of the way, Fedora is for you. I’ve been using it for years now and see no reason to switch.

darkufo ,

Same here, Tried about 10 distros and always end back with Fedora.

Been using it full time on my 2 desktops, and 2 laptops for 2 years now without ever thinking about trying another distro.

phar ,

I think I enjoy using Manjaro more than Fedora but I always end up back on Fedora because it just works correctly all the time

Richard , to gaming in In which game did you spend the most hours?

According to Steam it’s Left4Dead. That said, Steam only began tracking use in 2009. Not only do I expect my Left4Dead hours to be much higher as I played that mainly at launch in 2008, but I also think that game would be a distant second to Counterstrike Source which I played heavily around release while I was in university.

metaStatic , to fediverse in It gives me great joy to interact with you all on different instances/projects

Host an instance, even a single user instance would be good @selfhosted

I think niche communities will do better when they start to break away from the larger instances

CommunityLinkFixer Bot ,

Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !selfhosted

impalawild OP ,

Would you have an idea of what kind of traffic/storage I would be looking at, if I were to host a community that gets 500 posts a day? I know this is a very vague question, so a ballpark answer would suffice. Asking because I’d like to host niche locality based communities for my country (India) and hosting is not cheap here. I could perhaps do Hetzner auctions but the latency would not be pleasant.

metaStatic ,

I'm having trouble with my LAN, I'm not even close to thinking about public facing stuff.

just goto @selfhosted and ask around.

CommunityLinkFixer Bot ,

Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !selfhosted

impalawild OP ,

Fair, thank you!

ellie ,
@ellie@lemmy.silkky.dev avatar

My instance is just me rn but I’m federating with about 500 communities, including all of the most active ones and Lemmy is running really well. My system is only using about 10% cpu and about a 1gb of ram, I’m just using a Hetzner arm vps with 4 vcpus and 8 gb of ram. Even a single small server should be able to handle a lot of users imo.

impalawild OP ,

Hey, thank you, that’s good to hear.

Are there tools to “purge” media and cached posts? If I did delete older caches, lemmy would simply re-cache them the next time they are requested, right?

ellie ,
@ellie@lemmy.silkky.dev avatar

As far as I know there aren’t any tools to do that, Lemmy doesn’t automatically fetch older / deleted posts from federated communities like that, the reason is the way that federation works. When a user subscribes to a community on another server, that server will then start notifying their server when there’s new posts, comments, etc to fetch, but Lemmy doesn’t fetch older content, so only new stuff from that community will show up. I believe it’s possible to fetch old posts and comments using the search function though, you can read a bit more about it here: Lemmy docs

impalawild OP ,

Thank you!

GadgeteerZA , to technology in Multiplatform RSS reader suggestions
@GadgeteerZA@beehaw.org avatar

Yes, syncing is critical for me too. I self-host FreshRSS (will run on a Pi) and can access from my desktop browser or phone browser. I also pair it with Full Text RSS so that it pulls in the full text of the article. Otherwise, you have to look at Inoreader, Feedly, or similar, but they have limitations on their free tiers.

busturn , to selfhosted in Is moving to IPv6 worth it?

You’re asking if you should use it, while my ISP was working on it in 2017 and then it all got canned when they got bought out :( .

frog , to gaming in Are you an intrinsically or extrinsically motivated gamer?

I actually enjoy a bit of both! There’s definitely pros and cons to both types, and which I feel like playing varies according to my mood, energy levels, and what else I’ve played recently. Sometimes I want to be moving towards a destination and reward, other times I just want to wander around and do whatever.

lenninscjay ,

I’m currently playing x4 which is giving me a small dose of both. Overwhelmingly the game is more “make your own fun” but there are some small plot lines that reveal the story of some of the factions that I’ve been slow rolling as I build my empire.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines