The federation issues seem to have been fixed by https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/pull/4330
The federation issues seem to have been fixed by https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/pull/4330
Proceeds the Weedian!
The older I get the more I appreciate the simple brutality and precision of Metallica’s “Battery” riff
Something I realized on Mastodon years ago (well before the Twitter/X thing) is it quickly doesn’t matter so much to me how many active users a platform has. A platform is good enough if there’s some activity, and I like being there. Lemmy was already something I checked when I saw only a handful of new posts a day.
Anyway, that’s just my perspective. I’m not too concerned about downtrends of active users.
And if you’re rich, white and and a student athlete at Stanford you only get 6 months in jail.
A few more:
Hmm, so far I think I still liked Reddit’s algorithm better. Somehow it always managed to combine top posts from huge communities (news, videos, etc) with small niche interest communities on the same timeline. Hot on Lemmy feels almost like a random selection of posts to me. What people post here is good, but the way it’s selected and sorted doesn’t feel quite as meaningful to me.
I’m not sure. But as this is retrocomputing, I think “because we can” is often a good enough reason for people to make old things work again :)
A crucial difference between XMPP and ActivityPub is, I think, this:
A messaging protocol or platform like Email or XMPP or Signal is only useful if the people you want to converse with are on it. There’s no other reason to use it. This means you probably need to have some of the people you know personally on it before you want to use it.
However the two main types of ActivityPub apps are microblogging and link sharing. I don’t necessarily need to know anyone on Fedi to enjoy using these platforms. So the likelihood for these platforms to thrive and survive, and the resilience against them being killed by a single large actor defederating or shutting down is much higher.
Here’s a mostly forgotten one: Phantom 2040 for SNES
Not truly a metroidvania, but an interesting platformer shooter with branching paths and many different endings.