Supposed to be traditional.
Supposed to be traditional.
It’s not uncommon in a lot of industries for more traditional enterprises to refuse to do business with these sorts of companies.
Ok but for real tho. The average American severely underestimates how far you can get on rice, beans, lentils and chickpeas.
On top of that, it’s apparently used in astronomy to represent clusters of stars, like a constellation.
Isn’t that kind of perfect though
TL;DR: Articles on mastodon will now automatically link to the author’s fediverse handle.
In my memory people considered them meh at best but I had some fun. I remember the DS version in particular being pretty dope.
Seems like an essential feature to me. Curious to see if it’ll be in the beta.
Seems to me the most likely explanation is they got caught and fixed it.
This is super exciting. I think one of the things a lot of people are missing here is the potential for small wikis to augment existing fediverse communities. Reddit’s killer feature has always been the massive treasure trove of information for hobbyists and niche interests. There is huge potential in the fediverse to take advantage of that sort of natural collaborative knowledge building process.
I honestly don’t remember but I do recall it’s way more of a process than it used to be
Pretty utilitarian on the ol thinkpad
I think the big reason that nobody’s mentioned yet is simply that they were earlier. Back when projects like Tox and Matrix were first starting to pop up, telegram was already fully formed. Signal didn’t come until at least a year later and didn’t have feature parity until several years later. Telegram by contrast was a much closer experience to WhatsApp and Messenger, making the transition much easier, particularly for low-tech knowledge users.
Worth noting, they have since publicly apologized
Removed by mod
I don’t think it’s fair to write off the entire medium like that. They all share a common ancestor in Twitter and I think it’s fair to say the toxicity is inherited from there.
I think this is an incredibly outdated take. Python is just about the best general-purpose interpreted language out there right now.
The biggest problem with traditional forums is the fact that participation requires yet another account. This is the most significant thing that discord has going for it, nearly everybody already has a discord account. Federated forums mostly solve this issue tho
mastodon, bluesky, and lemmy are just going to be footnotes in history
Only if they squander their lead. So long as they innovate in ways befitting the fediverse form, they will probably maintain their position. That said, it seems to me like modular systems like bonfire will probably leapfrog the existing platforms pretty quickly.
Was this meant to be supplemented?