Does Lemmy have a way to get inactive mods removed and replaced?
Messaging the admins of the community’s home instance is generally the recommended approach.
Does Lemmy have a way to get inactive mods removed and replaced?
Messaging the admins of the community’s home instance is generally the recommended approach.
Sounds cool. Could this be used to improve push notifications from Lemmy apps?
IIRC, the German Redditors drew a better Canadian flag than the Canadian Redditors did. I’m glad that the Canadians on the fediverse seem to be organized a bit better.
TIL that the Beaver is a Tim!
Very well said.
Ah, thanks. Even if it is a bit confusing, it’s cool that they were able to switch out the underlying software without breaking everything. I guess it helps that mbin is a fork of kbin.
also kbin.run and kbin.earth
They’re asking about mbin, not kbin, no?
Wait, did they do something bad? I thought they were just a prolific poster of memes.
And a whopping… 3 servers?
Seems like a cool project though, along with sublinks. Might try them out once they are a bit more stable.
America alone has something like 3.5 BILLION people in it
Username checks out.
Thanks for sharing! I had not seen that!
“It’s 3-2.”
“It got two?”
“Um, so, uh, the winner is… James.”
“Are you any good at driving?”
“Beaten by a fucking shaggy tramp, that spent four hours peeling his fucking potatoes!”
I am still invested into this weird request :)
Haha, not sure why you would be, but thanks!
Why not do the steps you outlined above as a macro on your keyboard? This eliminates the need for JS.
This is another option I am considering. Again, I’m not too familiar with the tools, but I’m vaguely aware of tools like AutoHotkey. Are there any tools you would recommend for this sort of thing?
I’ve definitely made some new friends during this event. The camaraderie during these events can be vibrant.
I always think that I’d going back to that time
I think you accidentally a word.
Get hyped! Tell your friends and communities!
One problem I have with the crosspost feature is that the body text of the original post is just copied, rather than embedded. If the body text of the original post is edited, any crossposts are not updated. For all of its other shortcomings, I think Reddit’s implementation of crossposts is currently better.
Wow, that script is incredible. Thanks for sharing! You’ve saved me several minutes per day!
I love how it adds a button to view the original link as well.
I was confused on what they were trying to accomplish, and even after reading the article I am still somewhat confused.
Instead, when a user posts something, the algorithm automatically reads the content and tags it with relevant interests so it shows up on those pages. Users can turn up the serendipity slider to branch out beyond their stated interests, and the algorithm running the platform connects users with related interests.
Perhaps I’m a minority, but I don’t see myself getting much utility out of this. I already know what my interests are, and don’t have much interest in growing them algorithmically. If a topic is really interesting, I’ll eventually find out about it via an actual human.
where we should host the autonomous and self driving technology community and the whole time it was bloody obvious. @lugh@futurology.today can we host it on your instance?
I asked the futurology admins about adding additional communities that fit the futurology theme, but they seem uninterested. I’m not sure why, as having what is essentially a single-community instance seems a bit strange to me, but it’s ultimately their call.
@Lugh@futurology.today and @Espiritdescali@futurology.today, would you reconsider increasing the number of communities on your instance, provided they fit the futurology theme?
As is everyone born between 1965 and 2015, which is quite a few people.