It really depends. I usually prefer json. It’s easily understandable from humans and from machines, it doesn’t depends on indentation and above everything else I like it very much 🤣
It really depends. I usually prefer json. It’s easily understandable from humans and from machines, it doesn’t depends on indentation and above everything else I like it very much 🤣
I didn’t completely switch, koreader is installed side by side with the official software but it has a lot more feature and it suite my needs. Eg. I’m a developer and I wrote an Obsidian plugin to retrieve all my highlights and notes from koreader
On Android I like Moon+ Reader, on my Kobo I installed koreader
I’m an avid Obsidian user but I didn’t know about Matcha. It’s really cool
I want to jockely answer: curl
but there are seriously good cli rss readers out there:
I don’t think it’s even possibile. How do you propose such a feature to works like? Showing all the comments from all the post known to your instance (so showing ALL the posts)?
I’m incline to say that there’s no way. I order to have secure payments you have to secure each and every step of the process. Without a big corporation under those steps no one in his right mind will gamble with payments
the article say some bullshit … “platforms will be required to verify the ages of all minors” ok, fine … but wait … how can they do that??? Do they have to asks for every users worldwide their documents? And suspend any users that doesn’t prove he’s not a minor from one of those states?
having a redundant system is feasible (I’m just a dev, not an architect so don’t take my words for granted) but it have to be designed and putted together … and prices are gonna skyrocket
No. The “single source of truth” is the instance hosting the community. If it goes down the community itself goes down with the ship. The only way to prevent it is to have a IT infrastructure that can provide redundancy
Just curious: what feed are you using? Local or All? I use “Subscription” (I use the Italian UI so I’m not 100% sure about the English naming) and I just see the communities I subscribed to
Even if the fediverse didn’t want to monetize on the userbase money are still needed to keep things running
Actually he wants to get rid of “blocking public posts”
Maybe I’m wrong (I’m on Lemmy since yesterday morning) but if you host your instance you’re only caching the communities you are interested in …if you never care about a community or interacted with an instance then those data will never reach your instance. Federated doesn’t imply full redundancy
This is the only gold I can sell🥇 (for legal reasons this is a joke too)
Interesting. I just tried to follow a lemmy user in mastodon because I can’t find a way to follow a lemmy user in lemmy itself. I’d never thought to subscribe to a whole community from mastodon and judging from your experience I was right. To me it’s better to subscribe to a lemmy community in a lemmy instance this way all the contents are given a better structure
I’m not 100% sure about the terminology … Are you subscribed to the community in Lemmy? Are you following the community on another fediverse service? Are you following the community through the RSS?
you are the one talking about the left mouse button … BTW on almost any OS you should be able to config the behaviour of the click (on KDE I have letft+right click to emulate the middle click)
you can just middle click to open in a new tab
In response to your question, I’d like to share my personal experience regarding remote work. I have been working entirely remotely for years, and given this background, I cannot imagine returning to an office setting, even if it was just for one day a month.
The primary reason is tied to time and quality of life. If my office were an hour away from my home - and in reality, it’s even further - I would be committing 8 hours a week just for commuting. This effectively means that in terms of hours, I’d still be tied to a five-day work commitment when considering the commute time.
But beyond the simple tally of hours, there are aspects of daily life and routine to consider. On the days I’d be expected to be in the office, I would have significantly less time to spend with my son. This would majorly impact our daily routine. We wouldn’t get the chance to have lunch together, and the management of daily commitments would become much more complex.
In conclusion, given my background and personal priorities, I would unquestionably choose to continue working from home five days a week rather than commuting to the office for four days. The flexibility and time saved from commuting hold invaluable worth to me.