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kbin.life

Lando , to startrek in Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x03 "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow"

This was a classic Star Trek episode.

Napain , to showerthoughts in Lemmy is so good right now because there are no kids here

please don't randomly start some ageism crap suddenly now please. the vibes are good because we collectively experience self-efficacy against the corporate super power that is reddit. All people should feel welcome on lemmy

Redecco ,

I think it’s cause everyone here has to actually try and make meaningful content here as opposed to being jaded and doom scrolling while posting among hundreds of others - and getting told to use the search function. Every post rn has an impact so the vibes are good!

BombOmOm , to nostupidquestions in How do you include a thumbnail in a video url post?
@BombOmOm@lemmy.world avatar

Beat I have seen so far is to make the thumbnail yourself, make it an image post, and include the video link in the description. But, that is a poor solution.

Hoping they get a fix.

redpen OP ,
@redpen@lemmy.world avatar

Thanks!

ShadowCatEXE , to nostupidquestions in How do you include a thumbnail in a video url post?
@ShadowCatEXE@lemmy.world avatar

How thumbnails to links and videos are displayed is up to the client itself. I don’t think there’s any way for you to force it to show up. I’d imagine as Lemmy grows, so will it’s features. Thumbnails are super useful, so I’d imagine it’s something clients would support in the future.

redpen OP ,
@redpen@lemmy.world avatar

Thanks!

isatistinctoria , to gaming in What games would you recommend for someone that only recently got into gaming?

I highly recommend Hades! It’s a top-notch game with excellently balanced combat (and I say this as someone who doesn’t really like combat in video games), an awesome story, and outstanding art direction and voice acting. Because of its structure as a roguelite, you’re restarting every time you die but getting a little further every time, so it basically trains you up. It really made other combat games much more accessible to me. Plus you can use God Mode to lower the learning curve a bit while still keeping it moderately challenging.

Evergreen5970 ,

I don’t like roguelikes, I got it for the character interactions and what do you know, the gameplay is fun too!

Still not going to change my mind on roguelikes though. Just this one is nice.

Sibbo , to patientgamers in Just finished RAGE, moving on to play RAGE 2.

Rage 2 was even free on the epic games store at some point. Surprisingly fun open world shooter.

simplecyphers , to maliciouscompliance in You need to know what I'm going to do with MY money? Ok...

Inspiring haha.

I wonder what influence the stated reason had (if any) on the approval. What did he use it on?

AA5B ,

When I was in my my twenties, a few months into my first full time career job, I felt like I could splurge a little to celebrate. The problem was my credit card was stuck at “college student” limits, basically useless, and my salary was still going toward the basics of setting up my independent life.

My attempt to raise my credit limit was rejected, my attempt at a personal loan was rejected. Maybe they would have anyway, maybe I just needed to wait more, but I regret answering “buy a nice stereo”. It does sound like the epitome of careless spending to buy electronic gadgets beyond your immediate means. Even back then, your answer mattered.

The reason I’m convinced it mattered was replaying my conversation with my credit union in my head years later: it surely seemed like she was politely trying to get me to give a different answer.

WontonSoup , to nostupidquestions in Welcome all new users and Reddit refugees! [PARTNERED POST]
@WontonSoup@lemmy.world avatar

Appreciate the post. A fellow refugee with some questions..

So I have chosen Lemmy.world. I know I can browse cross instance and post wherever but I have some confusion with this too.

Each instance will have its own let’s say “news.” Some will be more popular than others of course but will likely have similar content. I then sub to “news” on whatever instance. But there’s still hundreds of other “news” out there with potentially different, but likely similar content. Isn’t this fragmentation bad for community?

Also, let’s say I am in instance xyz and that’s where I’ve registered my account. All of a sudden the admins no longer want to run things and shut it down. All those communities are gone? What happens to my user account?

I think federated content is great, but this is my first interaction with a service using it. Please help me understand what this ultimately looks like long term.

Edit: sorry this triple posted. I kept getting errors so I hit submit again… and then again. Deleted the duplicates

MargotRobbie ,
@MargotRobbie@lemmy.world avatar

Hi!

To answer your question, or, Now Lemmy Explain:

  1. Isn’t this fragmentation bad for community?

It's hope that eventually different cultures will develop within different communities with similar contents, so if you don't like, say, the culture or mods of one of the news communities, you can just as easily move to another news community with a culture that you felt is better, whereas on reddit, you don't really have that choice.

  1. All of a sudden the admins no longer want to run things and shut it down. All those communities are gone? What happens to my user account?

They are gone, just like normal forums, except for copies stored in instances federated to yours.

Currently, Lemmy, unlike Mastodon, does not have any way to transfer community/accounts to another instance. For Mastodon, most admins made promises to let the users know at least 30 days beforehand if they were ever to shut down their instance, but these should eventually be implemented.

  1. Please help me understand what this ultimately looks like long term.

None of us knows, but we should be trying to build something great here.

clueless_stoner OP ,
@clueless_stoner@lemmy.world avatar

“Barbie”, only in theaters July 21st.

MargotRobbie ,
@MargotRobbie@lemmy.world avatar

Is this some kind of viral marketing campaign?

WontonSoup ,
@WontonSoup@lemmy.world avatar

They are gone, just like normal forums, except for copies stored in instances federated to yours.

So once an instance is federated by another, those posts also live in the 2nd instance as sort of a backup?

Part of what I enjoyed about reddit was that I could find things that are 10 years old with a quick google search and still expect them to be there 10 years from now. If all this can go away at any moment, it sort of just feels like a chat room or something. Im not saying that is a bad thing, it just makes it difficult to build long term communities and a strong user base long term if its possible.

Do most people browse within their "local" or "all?" When browsing "all" I see some duplicate content from communities in other instances which I guess is to be expected. Again, not a bad thing - but if I have to search 15 other "news" to see discussion on something I am interested in, isnt that kind of cumbersome?

Enjoying the site so far, dont take my comments as criticism. Just doing my best to learn how to use this type of site and get the most out of it I can. Appreciate the replies from you all.

MargotRobbie ,
@MargotRobbie@lemmy.world avatar

So once an instance is federated by another, those posts also live in the 2nd instance as sort of a backup?

When you are browsing a federated community from your home instance, you are essentially interacting with your home instance's copy of that community, which will be sync'd to the instance of the federated community.

Think of it like email essentially: If someone sends you an email, but deletes their own email account, you will still have that message history, but you won't get more emails from that account.

it sort of just feels like a chat room or something.

Lemmy is not Discord, the messages are persistent and structured in nested threads just like reddit or traditional forums, so they will be organized and searchable.

Besides, any website, including reddit, can go away at any moment, but that doesn't mean they will.

Do most people browse within their “local” or “all?

You can do both, or, you can just subscribe to communities that you felt are interesting.

"All" is useful in that even if your home instance has relatively low activity, you can still comfortably browse content everywhere across Lemmy/Kbin.

But if I have to search 15 other “news” to see discussion on something I am interested in, isn't that kind of cumbersome?

You don't have to look at all of them, just the ones you find interesting.

WontonSoup ,
@WontonSoup@lemmy.world avatar

Yup all makes sense. Appreciate the insight into how things work.

I know its probably frustrating to have people come in and go "well reddit does XYZ" all the time, so its nice to get an explanation. Truthfully, I think a lot of us just needed a little kick start to get off that site to something new.

Itll take some time to get comfy and learn how it all works, but so far things seem great. Enjoy your day.

MargotRobbie ,
@MargotRobbie@lemmy.world avatar

You too.

Rooki ,
@Rooki@lemmy.world avatar

Its wanted to have multiple communities on different instances. as it is adding some protection of cencorship to it because the users can still see other news and if everyone says “China bad” but only your instance doesnt talk about => you know your instance is pro china and wants to cencor stuff.

thetwaddler ,

Is this why I see multiple technology communities when I search? I was trying to understand what the differences were

WontonSoup ,
@WontonSoup@lemmy.world avatar

I guess maybe the way to think about it is that each instance is like a “mini reddit” with its own content, admins, mods, userbase etc.

You still have access through your instance to any others that exist and can participate in those others as well. But, your home base is where you registered. At least thats my understanding so far

simplecyphers , to maliciouscompliance in You need to know what I'm going to do with MY money? Ok...

Inspiring haha.

I wonder what influence the stated reason had (if any) on the approval. What did he use it on?

gorillakitty OP ,

Glad you asked.

Short answer: gambling

Long answer: us kids were starting high school and he knew college was after that, so he needed to figure out how to come up with some money to help us. He was good at math, so someone suggested he play the stock market.

He started off investing "fake" money (just his own personal ledger) and did pretty good. So he invested small amounts and continued to do well. He finally decided to borrow money from the bank, which is how the story came about.

He actually did REALLY well; paid off the loan, got a bigger one, paid that off, etc, until he had enough of his own money to keep investing. He beat the S&P every year, he had a talent for it.

But he really didn't enjoy it, he said it was a lot of work to keep up with the markets and how they interacted with each other. He kept it up for a few years after we finished college until he had a comfortable nest egg and quit.

He only paid for half our college, as a matter of principle he wanted us to come up with the other half. I still have loans to pay off but it was a huge help.

Now he hates capitalism and doesn't do any investing at all. He used to have some safe mutual funds but he's jaded about the state of the world, he doesn't want any part of the system.

DebatableRaccoon ,

Reminds me of Brad Pitt’s character in The Big Short.

ugo , to linux in is there a Linux alternative to windows 10/11 that is similar?

People usually recommend Linux mint or some Ubuntu version. I recommend neither.

Ubuntu is a proprietary-solution-ridden piece of hot garbage that tries to hinders what you do at any chance. I use it daily for work, unfortunately.

It’s been a few years since I tried mint. It looked good and felt nice for the first few hours, after that I don’t remember what happened, it was maybe lack of configurabilità or lack of support, but I noped out very quickly and I just remember that my thoughts were “never again”.

I never tried it, but it looks like Pop!_OS might be the thing to look out for in this space.

Besides that, know that Linux is different from windows starting from its very philosophy. Keep an open mind, it can be a confusing journey for a beginner (which is why I am holding back about telling you about the many possibilities).

One thing to keep in mind is that some software that you were used to will not be available, and that you might need to look for alternatives. But as far as the things you mentioned go, these are my recommendations:

  • browser: Firefox
  • gaming: steam
  • streaming: OBS
Spoken_Weakley , to startrek in Episode Discussion | Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | 2x03 "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow"

“This was supposed to happen in 1992!”

Is that a reference to how the eugenics wars were supposed to happen in the 90’s but obviously those came and went so they’re softly retconning when the eugenics wars took place?

XiberKernel ,

I kinda like this theory. The temporal wars are still affecting the timeline, but time is pushing back to repair the timeline. In-universe reason to both retcon and act as a story element as well (with hopefully a Wesley Crusher appearance at some point?)

NuPNuA ,

That fits with how they described time travel and alternative universe’s working in the DTI books too which is nice. It takes a major shift to the probability wave to spin off a new timeline (Human physiology difference like light sensitivity or the Narada incursion) smaller changes collapse back into the main timeline quickly.

GildorInglorion , to nostupidquestions in How do some podcasts have location-based ads when my podcast player doesn't have location permissions?

Unless you’re using a VPN, they can get close with your IP address

coygsu ,

In addition to this comment, here is a Wiki section discussing the methods of geolocating: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_geolocation#Data_s…. It is important to note that a VPN isn’t the only way to alter an IP address. It is currently the most viable and safe way. You can use a proxy server or a tor browser (depending on the node) as alternatives.

Vorticity OP ,

Thank you for this. It made me realize that my VPN had become disabled…

mrsfrizzlegavemelsd , to futurama in Can't believe I was the first to get this username.

I felt the same about mine lol. Feels good!

Max_P , to linux in Is it just me, or does NixOS almost feel like a different operating system from Linux?
@Max_P@lemmy.max-p.me avatar

Linux is Linux, nix is just a tool to essentially build a view of the root filesystem in a special way. In the end, it’s not that different than if you do everything from Ansible playbooks, in a Dockerfile, from Puppet/Chef or any other automation technologies.

Heck, if you look closely at Debian/Ubuntu, there’s the whole debconf system that lets you configure packages directly from the package manager, and it generates configuration files based of that. If you install Postfix on Debian, it’s going to ask you how you want to use it and it generates some ready to use configuration files. Then if you install Dovecot, it might just work out of the box using that configuration to know how you set up Postfix and let you fetch your emails over IMAP. It’s not nearly as comprehensive as nix does it, but the concept of a main configuration file is far from new, nix just pushed it to a whole other level.

Building packages also differ wildly between distros. ArchLinux uses simple PKGBUILD files that are essentially just bash scripts. Debian uses debhelper and dh_make, and lets you do some really crazy things with the build system to reduce boilerplate so that all Python packages for example are built exactly the same way and often in just a few lines.

Distros also put files in different places. On Debian, system-wide systemd units are in /lib/systemd, but it’s /usr/lib/systemd on Arch. Distros use different tools: apt, yum, dnf, pacman, pkg, etc. Debian in particular really likes to ship with heavily customized configurations. For example, if you install NGINX on Debian or Ubuntu, you have a /etc/nginx/sites-{available,enabled} and it’s got a helper script to easily enable/disable a site. On Arch, there’s no folders, you get a plain basic default /etc/nginx/nginx.conf. On macOS, I have that config in /usr/local/etc/nginx/nginx.conf. The default location of configuration files is inherently a compile-time property, just so happens that most distros puts it in the same place.

I’ve worked with part-time admins / web developers that completely panic when they SSH into a system that’s not Ubuntu and they don’t know how to do anything.


If you like NixOS, just enjoy and you’ll be fine. Completely different means of achieving the same things, and if anything will make you more aware of potential variations. Nothing preventing you from having VMs with more classical distros to keep up to date with how to admin those. A lot of things still work the same: you can still systemctl restart a service, you’ve still got a bash shell that works exactly the same. You’re just going to manipulate and template nix files instead of directly modifying configuration files, but still ends up generating that file for the software to use.

I use Arch for all my stuff, and Ubuntu at work. Because I use one doesn’t make me not well versed in the others. NixOS have real advantages, and I know some companies that have fleets of NixOS servers.

kremdostup , to android in [Question] Google play turned off my Wi-Fi?
@kremdostup@lemmy.world avatar

Never happened to me but seems spooky as fuck

SkaBunkel OP ,

Yeah, it was. But I can use it now, so it must have been a glitch. But even so, I don’t want this feature to exist at all.

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