Just a picture I took today at the Bamboo Grove behind Tenryu-ji temple in Kyoto.
Kyoto is one of the loveliest cities I’ve seen, but going late July is a very, very sweaty experience.
Just a picture I took today at the Bamboo Grove behind Tenryu-ji temple in Kyoto.
Kyoto is one of the loveliest cities I’ve seen, but going late July is a very, very sweaty experience.
Hello!
My attempt at a stupid question is: Do you need an account on every instance that hosts a community that you want to interact with (e.g., upvote, post, reply)?
So I have seen the phrase “it does not matter on which Lemmy instance you register, and you only need to register on one". All Lemmy instances show identical posts and comments, and let you follow all users and communities.” in many guides. This makes me think I should be able to upvote and reply on any post or community as long as I have an account on a federated instance. However, atleast while using the Liftoff! App, if I try to upvote a comment from a post link via beehaw while logged into Lemmy.one or Lemmy.world for example I get an error “this post was linked via beehaw. You are not logged in there.”
This seems to indicate that I need a beehaw account if I want to interact with posts there and contribute. This in turn makes it seem like I’ll need an individual account on every instance that has a community I want to be a part of.
Thank you for the quick reply!
1-way defederation is interesting, but it seems like could it be used as a tool to try and force users on to one instance as then they get the most access to everything. Though I also see that it’s useful in cases of abuse or brigading. Lots to get used to, but it’s quite fun.
Thanks again for answering!
I took this last weekend. Wish I was back up there today!
Well I am honored! I didn’t know this was a thing.
Can’t wait to see all the beautiful pictures this community puts together!
The line workers would not be aware of power coming from the load side and therefore may accidentally work on a live line and die.
Most rooftop solar that plugs into the grid is set up to switch off if power goes out for this reason.
This is mostly and educated (from a solar class years ago) guess.