Bloodbeech Forest
- 2 Posts
- 23 Comments
It’s “different from”.
“Similar to”; “different from”; “less/greater than”. “Different than” doesn’t make sense.
Different app
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Science@beehaw.org•"string theory lied to us and now science communication is hard"English0·2 years agoI didn’t watch this video but I suspect the sentiment is similar to Sabine’s (I highly recommend her channel)
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Linux@lemmy.ml•Immutable Operating Systems: Yay or Nay?English0·2 years agoThe problem there is you not having the ability to change the configuration of the system image. Not the immutability.
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Lemmy@lemmy.ml•I found a major communication problem with public perception of Lemmy. they seem to think a community is tied to a particular instance0·2 years agoThe idea is that you browse your feed of subscriptions, not that you literally go to an instance and browse their local feed.
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Technology@beehaw.org•Discord is opening the monetization floodgates: get ready for microtransaction stores and paid 'exclusive memes'0·2 years agoIt has video+audio calls but not push-to-talk and there are no “voice only”-rooms or whatever it is discord has
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Jerboa@lemmy.ml•When will new versions be pushed to the Play Store?0·2 years agoI don’t know if I solved it by disabling and re-enabling the repo but that’s one of the things I tried and later I could see it.
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Technology@beehaw.org•Discord is opening the monetization floodgates: get ready for microtransaction stores and paid 'exclusive memes'0·2 years agoI never used Discord but used google hangouts before switching to Telegram and Matrix (the former for family and the latter for everything else).
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Science@beehaw.org•The Evidence is Building that Dark Matter is Made of AxionsEnglish0·2 years agoWe don’t know if axions are a real thing. Thus is still highly speculative.
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Lemmy.World Announcements@lemmy.world•Lemmy reached a user base of 150,000English0·2 years agoNo, only comments made after they refederate
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzOPto Lemmy@lemmy.ml•A shift of perspective: instances as communities; "communities" as subforums0·2 years agoIf this is a reference, I’m not getting it.
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Technology@beehaw.org•I don't see how Lemmy will fill the gap of Reddit - it's resulting in fragmentationEnglish0·2 years agoI don’t disagree. I want to see topic aggregation as soon as possible too.
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Technology@beehaw.org•I don't see how Lemmy will fill the gap of Reddit - it's resulting in fragmentation0·2 years agoMy comment was in response to the implication that people who exercise their right to not listen to everyone talking are using defederation as some sort of weapon to fulfil their chaotic, destructive agenda while free-speech instances are merely open to any and all interactions like exemplary participants in a civilised democratic society.
If you actually want to know what my perspective is, I just wrote about it: https://mander.xyz/post/739439
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Technology@beehaw.org•I don't see how Lemmy will fill the gap of Reddit - it's resulting in fragmentationEnglish0·2 years agoI don’t think of the threadiverse as a link aggregation platform but as a network of communities engaging in threaded discussion. The federated model is an answer to the problem of platform lock-in, the network effect, and the lack of autonomy communities have on proprietary/commercial/centralised platforms.
Each instance separately may fill the role of link aggregator but mainly for that community (instance), with that community’s values and moderation policies. The ability for an instance to federate with other instances with compatible policies is the benefit here.
It may actually help if you view an instance as the community, with its “communities” as its topics.
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Technology@beehaw.org•I don't see how Lemmy will fill the gap of Reddit - it's resulting in fragmentationEnglish0·2 years agoWithout the possibility of creating a meta layer to let users group different communities into a single feed
This isn’t an intrinsic limitation of the protocol but a matter of UX, and given how frequently it is requested it’s bound to be implemented in some way by some project; if not Lemmy then maybe kbin or something new that crops up.
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Technology@beehaw.org•I don't see how Lemmy will fill the gap of Reddit - it's resulting in fragmentation0·2 years agothe free side, that talks with everyone
the side that talks at everyone and gets mad when people exercise their freedom from listening to everyone
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Chat@beehaw.org•How long until Threadiverse is ready for normies?English0·2 years agoSome things I think are needed first:
- greatly improved UX for handling links to content hosted on other instances: you shouldn’t have to use the inconspicuous search function to access it via your instance,
- community collections: aggregating communities by topic each with a clear overview, their own feed and a nice, convenient way to create and view crossposts between them,
- more polished and stable app(s),
- ease of migrating between instances (massive bonus if we can have portable identities),
- a change in how we present the core idea behind the federation model: it’s not about aggregation (this misconception leads to frustration over “fragmentation”), it’s about community self-governance/autonomy and error-correction (as in making it easier for communities to migrate if authority is abused).
Bloodbeech Forest@mander.xyzto Chat@beehaw.org•Where can I find the roadmap for mlem?English0·2 years agoEdit: commentes in the wrong thread due to bug
As far as I thought I knew, you can’t follow mastodon accounts from Lemmy. Is my understanding incorrect?
It hasn’t been updated in like a year and there is no spell correction. Am I missing something or is this just an acceptable tradeoff for you?