Heastes

@Heastes@lemmy.world
0 Post – 30 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

this is a clear case of hate crime that ended in murder

The kid fortunately survived.

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Laws are threats made by the dominant socioeconomic-ethnic group in a given nation. It’s just the promise of violence that’s enacted and the police are basically an occupying army. You know what I mean?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bmaoNLSHx_w

I wonder what it is that is keeping more diverse users away?

One aspect is that federation is definitely a bit harder to wrap your head around technically.

But I think another large contributor is the fact that culturally, the zoomers never really grew up with things like independent forums. I'm 33 and back in t the day it was very common for me to be signed up to many different forums for my different interests. Over time, I've seen the centralization of those communities, forums shut down and centralized services like Reddit, and lately Discord took their place.
I remember a time when the internet wasn't solely controlled by a handful of organisations, I can see the value in federated systems. But someone who only knows centralized services and walled gardens is likely to fear the wild, or at least won't value it as much.

//edit: Another thing to keep in mind, is that it's just very common for this demographic to be early adopters for tech products and platforms. I remember when Twitter started, and a large part of its early user base was people in their 30s or older who were very into tech, or journalists. The reason I started using Twitter towards the end of the 2000s was because most of the podcast hosts and regular contributors on the TWiT network were using it.
Seems to me that if you want to launch a social media platform, your early adopters are either guys who are into tech and in their 30s and 40s or teenage girls.

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I’m not sure if it’s every ADHD person, but I have accidentally quit smoking.

If you can accidentally quit a physically addictive habit, things like brushing your teeth don’t stand a chance.

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I had a look at my bank account, and it turns out I actually can't.

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Pretty much, yes. - Shodan user

I'm taking bets on how long it takes for Google to remove those 1 & 2-star reviews because some automated review bombing algorithm kicks in.

I think the issue is that people nowadays have come to expect a certain degree of individualized feeds and discovery features.

There is probably plenty of content on mastodon that would be of interest to any given user, but the discoverability is kind of lacking - especially if you are used to Twitter's algorithmic feed.

It's a 50/50 split between Waldemar and Eugen.

Or many of the other games in the genre as long as they have auto-aim. Brotato and halls of torment are worth checking out, imo.

I've been very happy with mxroute for quite a few years now. They have a summer deal going on for $40 a year for unlimited domains and accounts, you're only limited by storage (100GB) and outgoing emails per hour.
t would be helpful to know what you consider basic features you want the host to support, but catchall works.

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Elon has trauma from being ousted as CEO by the board at x.com (the company that would later become PayPal).

He's living in the past.

I was going to mention it-tools. It's great!
And if you need more stuff in a similar vein, cyberchef is also pretty neat.

We really weren’t.

Not surprising. We're in a gold rush for AI and Nvidia is selling shovels.

Unless I'm actively looking for a specific type of application, or to replace one I already run, I just check in on the subreddit periodically, just looking at the top posts from the past month or so.
I guess I'll start checking in on lemmy now.

There was a time, where I was checking for new stuff to selfhost almost daily. But at this point, I have what I want, and there is no point in trying to change a running system.

Tsamina mina, eh, eh. Waka waka, eh, eh

I can't help with the whole connection between the VPS and your home server bit, but Minio is probably what you're looking for when it comes to selfhosted object storage.

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I think generally speaking, you can make the distinction between something like lemmy/reddit and something like mastodon/twitter as putting interest/community first or putting the individual first.

Lemmy/Reddit is great if you want to follow a specific topic and don't necessarily care about what the individual users think. I don't know about you, but I barely ever read or acknowledge someone's username on those platforms.

Mastodon/Twitter is great if you want to follow specific people for their opinions. Like seeing what certain politicians or analysts have to say about developments in Ukraine. Things that might be interesting but not quite newsworthy, or putting news into a different context.
For any given interest you have, there are probably some voices who you care about hearing from more than others, be it just because you know them personally or because they are experts in their respective fields. Microblogging platforms are built to support that individual-first approach.

You want a legitimate source of income. If the bitcoins were obtained illegally or through illegal activities, you are fucked as soon as you try to cash out.

Even if you somehow manage to cash out and not get caught at that point, having large amounts of disposable cash with no legitimate source of income would also trigger some alarm bells.

Never forget that Al Capone went to jail for tax evasion, not all the other shit he did.

That was always the point of the blue check under Elon. It’s very clear already that blue checks have vastly higher reach and engagement. This all started back in December.

https://www.theverge.com/2022/12/23/23523845/twitter-blue-paying-priority-replies-conversations

I'm using a thinclient (Fujitsu S920), slapped an Intel Pro/1000 NIC in there and installed opnsense. Hardware cost for both used was around €80. Wifi is handled by a TP-Link access point.

It's a big boy router/firewall, and it's been quite a learning experience but very fun.

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Germany feddit.dk

.dk is Denmark. feddit.de is the German one.

Huh, MWII released 2022.

Yeah, I'm not so sure either.
I mostly just played around with it because some application I was testing relied on s3 storage and Minio was the best selfhosted project I could find that was s3 compatible. Worked pretty well, from what I can remember.

Me too! I'm flip-flopping between Underground 2 and Most Wanted 2005.
Great games, running great in PCSX2.

Embrace, extend, extinguish is exactly what first came to my mind when I heard about threads planning to federate. I think it is a huge risk.

The biggest reason is that PWA allows for web push notifications.
iOS is pretty strict when it comes to background apps keeping open connections, that's one of the reasons why there is no gotify app on iOS. They list the possible workaround with apple's APN service, but that would kind of defeat the purpose of selfhosting,

I'm afraid the biggest obstacle would be Apple's strict restrictions on background services. We cannot keep a persistent WebSocket connection in the background without abusing some APIs, which will absolutely disqualify the app from going onto the App Store and drain the battery significantly. Notifications could only be delivered through APN, which requires a developer account and a central server to manage notifications and send them to Apple before reaching the user, but this is not what gotify is designed for.

https://github.com/gotify/server/issues/87#issuecomment-457453135

//edit: If you check the ntfy docs, you'll see that instant delivery is not supported on iOS. So if you have uses that are time-sensitive, PWA with web push definitely has the advantage.

Interesting, is your fork available publicly or was that just a personal project?

Shreddit is great. Have been using it in docker for ages to periodically remove comments that are older than a certain amount of time.

What did you have to adapt, though?

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