It depends, but… mostly yes. I don’t agree with most big companies ideologically speaking… I’d have a hard time finding work if I limited myself in that way.
It depends, but… mostly yes. I don’t agree with most big companies ideologically speaking… I’d have a hard time finding work if I limited myself in that way.
Still holding on to my S4 until it dies or they make a decent upgrade to battery life.
Agreed. Also a Reddit migrant, and I feel like even if it’s changed here since our mini exodus (which I believe), I’m still finding it much more pleasant than Reddit.
So… by “users MUST not”, you mean you’d prefer if they didn’t.
Already some suggestions and a new post here, but also check out !movies@lemmy.world if you haven’t sub’d yet. The more communities you have the more likely you’ll see fresh discussion!
Doesn’t stop them from showing up via All and Local, which is what I want to do without having the completely block these communities. Just my preference.
I haven’t looked at the PR, but if it’s really that simple, that doesn’t seem like the full solution. I don’t particularly want a sub with 10 users popping up on the front page after 3 upvotes just because it got to the top of that sub. Sub weight, as mentioned in the top comment here, should probably be taken in to account.
Yeah, I do. There’s just more content there. More articles. More questions. More discussion. Not all of it is good, but a lot of what I use reddit for is taking the temperature on things… games, movies, books, general opinions on news articles, etc. I like Lemmy, but it doesn’t have the userbase to make this my only “front page of the internet” for now.
This is the way to do it. Autocorrect is doing 90% of the work in either case anyway, lol.
My understanding for Beehaw specifically is that it was a temporary measure to guard against the huge influx of users, as well as a way to stop trolls from creating duplicate accounts from World (since it’s popular and has open registration). Defederating gives them time to figure some things out and scale up if they want to.
To clarify a bit for you, since it was confusing for me… you have to sign in to whichever instance you registered on (.ml in your case). However, you can view and comment on content from any site that federates with lemmy.ml. So, for example, I’m registered through lemmy.world, but if I go to search and search for “gaming”, communities for all instances are returned, at which point I can subscribe, read, and comment on them via my lemmy.world account. (perhaps a bad example since .ml is no longer federated with .world I think)
We’re still doing this, huh? Smartphone fanboying? Pretending like one side is clearly superior? This shit is so tired.