What specific parts of Arch Wiki do you find useful as a Debian user?
What specific parts of Arch Wiki do you find useful as a Debian user?
Reddit was the same way after the Digg migration. Everyone was talking about Digg for a while. Over time, Digg mentions became more and more rare.
Tokyo night theme looks very similar to Atom’s One Dark theme. Is there a connection between these two?
I switched to clang a long time ago, when gcc’s support for C++11 was not that good.
Why do you personally prefer gcc?
App users still make API calls to Twitter’s domain. Depending on the domain name, these app users might still be counted.
Trying to be controversial on purpose.
It measures the most popular sites by dns lookup. Twitter fell from 32nd to 39th.
While playing video games for hours with no break.
I will never use it but if Threads steals users from Twitter, that will reduce Twitter’s dominance and make it easier for other users to switch to the Fediverse.
Just make sure to defederate Threads from the start.
Using Firefox to post on Lemmy - feels good man.
Having said that, Firefox would be much better if Mozilla would spend their resources on improving the browser instead of random shenanigans.
I expect this to evolve like email did. It used to be very easy to host your own mail server but due to spam the large providers started using whitelists and nowadays it’s almost impossible to have a self hosted mail server that is approved by the others.
Similarly, I expect that hosting your own Lemmy instance will be impossible in the future. We should enjoy it while we can.
I wish Reddit apps were promoting Lemmy in their shut down message to users.
When Chrome was first launched, so many people thought Incognito would be useless. Little did they know.
I’m glad to see this but app stores have anti review bomb measures so this might not make a difference
Moderating is time consuming, tedious and done by volunteers. I’m not surprised that they get overrun after the latest influx of users.
Lemmy needs to make Hot the default. It’s a better experience for new users.
In an ideal world these APIs would be free. But corporations exist to maximize profit and their value is the user network and the content that users generate. Of course they will try to milk it as much as possible.
Vivaldi and Brave can modify Chromium to disable this feature. Chromium is open source after all.