That’s a good point, I never thought of that
That’s a good point, I never thought of that
I find it’s easier to engage on Lemmy. One can share a different viewpoint and often find discussion rather than being shit on because you’re not part of the echo chamber.
Someone who’s assertive (not to be mistaken for someone who thinks they’re assertive and really is just an asshole).
Someone offering constructive criticism.
Especially those two put together.
Someone who’s assertive (not to be mistaken for someone who thinks they’re assertive and really is just an asshole).
Someone offering constructive criticism.
Especially those two put together.
Someone who’s assertive (not to be mistaken for someone who thinks they’re assertive and really is just an asshole).
Someone offering constructive criticism.
Especially those two put together.
I’ve been kinda partial to Lemmings personally.
I assume it’s inevitable and there are people working on a solution. That aside, I’m pretty excited to see what quantum computing will be capable of in our lifetime.
Can they stop Bobby K. and save Activision in time?
Find out next time on Dragonball Z
It looks pretty good for a picture of a screen.
In a nutshell, an RSS feed reader will aggregate any articles/posts from sites you choose. I pull all my local news and a subreddit into my reader.
I’ve had a good experience with Feedly. they have a free and paid tier. I use the free one, and even keep up with one subreddit that won’t be migrating. I also added my local news websites which eliminated a need for Facebook.
I also enjoy ground news.
I did. I had one sub that I wanted to keep up with so I added them into my RSS reader and spend my time on Lemmy.
A bit off topic ,but fun fact: I read that any site that uses Facebook analytics gets user data harvested. so even though you have no accounts with any meta products, you are, in theory, vulnerable to Meta data harvesting.
That seems valid. I think at least part of the problem is culture. Millennials were taught that college is a necessary stepping stone to a superior job, which it was in previous generations, but not so much nowadays.