I don't know, it sounds a bit Linux circle-jerky to me but then again a lot of people are indeed very clueless, true!
I don't know, it sounds a bit Linux circle-jerky to me but then again a lot of people are indeed very clueless, true!
Gay pony on B4! Avada Kedavra!
Crazy that you are all using it for entire projects! I'm using it when I get stuck programming with some traceback I can't resolve or similar, mostly for Python/Django. Even then it often forgets to close a loop or similar.
I moved from Jerboa to wefwef because Jerboa couldn't open certain instances that were not on Lemmy's newest version.
Can you recommend a resource that would explain these differences and more Lemmy lingo? I'm still quite overwhelmed by everything. Thanks!
Agreed! I also believe we need to push through these toothing pains so that Lemmy can over time become a real contender and house more communities that were previously on Reddit.
That's how I understand it too, but I just cannot wrap my head around why this would be a good idea. Why would anyone want having to have 5 different accounts just to browse all the communities they are interested in?
Thanks! I think while we all figure this out it's good to just coast along as well. Fake it till you make it, haha!
Why would an instance choose to defederate? Maybe I am misunderstanding but wouldn't this result in several communities being split into several instances without even knowing about each other? Smaller communities (for example I was following a subreddit for bicycle touring) might be too dispersed to function then, no?
Does anyone really not know if they have an apple or windows device...?