Why do you think the flowers let the bees have their nectar.
Why do you think the flowers let the bees have their nectar.
Don’t take a gift from a German as remedy.


Signal doesn’t send anything in the payload. They just use it to wake the phone up and then download all messages that are waiting to be delivered through the usual encrypted means. All Google knows is that something happened at that time. They don’t know anything else.
You can click the eye on top of a feed to switch between seeing and hiding read posts.


As an instance admin I wouldn’t even know what I could do. This stuff should be automatic.
But it can happen with posts if their community hasn’t been subscribed to from your server yet. Posts, comments and votes only transfer over from the moment someone on your server subscribed to that community. That’s at least how it works with Lemmy and I imagine it’s similar on kbin.


But they only instruct Signal to wake up and download whatever is waiting. They don’t contain the message contents.


Well behaved bots should see the origin in the headers and only crawl those.


I was once driving to work while listening to Shine on You Crazy Diamond. It was a gloomy foggy morning and I couldn’t see shit. But then the first sunrays began to slip through in perfect sync with the intro until I emerged from the fog exactly at the crescendo to the sight of beautiful sunlit meadows. It was divine.


I regularly encounter images not loading from quock.au. No idea if they’ve got that under control now but that is the most visible issue every instance fights with. Gonna be great when we have a recommended configuration for Lemmy.
I don’t understand why they don’t use the client side filter-variable in Lemmy UI. It has been available for a while now. It solves a whole bunch of problems. Summit implemented it a few versions ago and it works great. I can hide and unhide posts with the push of a button.
That’s what the scaled sort is supposed to solve. It pushes up posts that are popular relative to other posts in their communities. So even if they regularly get 0 upvotes they should still show up.
I use the scaled sort on subscribed together with hiding read posts and marking posts as read when I scroll by. That way I usually see the posts made in smaller communities fairly regularly.
You don’t log into other services you just subscribe to what you want from them.
If you know of a community on a piefed server like !piefed_meta@piefed.social you just search for that community on mander.xyz. If it isn’t known yet to mander you have to wait a little bit for it to fetch it and then you can subscribe to it or just view the newest posts.
If someone else from mander has already subscribed to the community mander will already know about it and have many posts, including comments. If you are the first than mander will only fetch the newest posts.
It works exactly the same way with Lemmy communities.


I wanted to have more sausages in my lentil stew but we don’t have any sausages at the moment. So I had to accept the amount of sausages that were already in the can.
Did not expect that.
!unexpected@lemmy.ml But there aren’t many posts.
Switch and Click had a video about that recently: https://youtu.be/M9qJI2u_be0


Reminds me of the time I was working on something for Mercedes but they couldn’t supply me with the computer for testing. I had to go into the super cramped actual car that was parked in a super expensive secure garage.
Left the company and when I went there for a visit I saw that the new guy actually got to test and develope on a computer they had ripped out of a car.


Distribution has almost nothing to do with getting a game to run. I’d concentrate on the game specifics, collect logs, validate the files in Steam, try different Proton versions, check protondb, check if other games work, etc.
I use Nextcloud. Of course that only makes sense when you use the other Nextcloud stuff as well.