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52
Joined
8 mo. ago

  • It would be nice if we could set a default layout for feeds as well.

  • Using Kiwix you can keep older versions of Wikipedia locally on your computer, so if the online version reaches an unusable state, you can still view the articles as they used to be. Of course, it won't have information about anything that happened after that point, but it could still be useful for some purposes.

  • There needs to be a Fediverse platform just for viewing and commenting on videos without being a video publisher yourself. Then we'd see a lot more traffic coming to PeerTube channels. It also needs to provide a good mechanism for discovering channels you're not already aware of.

  • New Communities @lemmy.world

    HomeComputing

    piefed.social /c/homecomputing
  • Looks like Skylight is app-only, no website.

  • Not the Internet, but rather the World Wide Web. The once-humble webpage has become such a complex stack of technologies that it's impossible for small dev teams to make alternatives to the established web browsers.

  • Deleted

    Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Because I want to control my own computer. I had to pay for the device, so I should be treated as the owner, yet Microsoft and Apple act like they own people's computers, and build software that treats the computer as property of those corporations.

    I don't like tinkering just to get stuff working, so I use more user-friendly Linux distributions, and it's been very smooth.

  • The real top boss is the Chairman of the Board of Directors, although the Chairman is often appointed CEO, it doesn't always happen. The Board of Directors is made up of large shareholders - the people who actually own the company. The CEO is technically just an employee and needn't own any shares at all (although that would be extremely abnormal).

    So, there may actually be a time when a corporation's Board decides to use an "AI" as their CEO to cut costs.

  • The real security hole is how much information the browser gives to the web server. The only thing a web server needs to know is what content the user is looking for, but sadly web browser send a ton of identifying information to the point where it's become expected behaviour and some websites won't work without it.

  • It's still useful. You can't guarantee that someone will have access to an emoji picker. I don't think it's built-in to the DE I'm writing this comment in.

  • Thanks. I did try again a couple of days ago and it works now.

  • How do I actually use it? I have an account, but when I go to the site it only shows me my "account dashboard" - how do I actually see what people have been posting?

  • I'm talking about the software side of things. Generative "AI" seems to be a "brute force" approach to artificial intelligence - just throwing hardware at the problem instead of finding a better approach. Given the limitations of GenAI, it just feels crazy to keep going this way. Like a sunk-cost fallacy. These are just my thoughts though, not a real scientific analysis.

  • I have to doubt the cost efficiency too.

  • It's strange that the concept of efficiency seems to have been abandoned. Is consumption of vast computing resources no longer seen as indication of a design flaw?

  • I wouldn't. I would just describe the services people might be interested in. Users have specific needs they want services to provide. I would talk to them in terms of those needs.

    As for why federation, just mention that you don't need to create many separate accounts. For example, you can follow a PeerTube account from Mastodon.

  • Makes sense to do that on Reddit itself. If you're posting on the equivalent platform I guess you are talking to people specifically looking for alternatives. I was thinking more about advertising on non-equivalent platforms, like Mastodon on YouTube, PeerTube on Reddit, etc.

    Honestly I'm not sure how Reddit itself became so popular among people who never used old Internet forums like I did, so the Threadiverse is something I don't have ideas for.

  • Firefox is a Chrome alternative, Linux is a Window alternative.

    These are not inaccurate descriptions, but it makes them sound like inferior imitations and gives the impression that they'll always be second best. It is also a kind of free-advertising for Chrome/Windows.

  • "A cool new place to share links and discuss things"? Or just "a cool new social media"?

  • Fediverse @piefed.social

    Referring to Fediverse services as "Alternatives" is bad marketing

  • Ask Lemmy @lemmy.world

    How to find offline alternatives to software-as-a-service and apps with unnecessary internet connections?

  • Fediverse @piefed.social

    Are Threadiverse Platforms (Lemmy, PieFed, etc.) convenient for making official forums?

  • Fediverse @piefed.social

    Federated Multiplayer Gaming?

  • Fediverse @piefed.social

    Account Portability and Cryptographic Signing

  • PieFed Meta @piefed.social

    Seems like there is a problem between PieFed and the Voyager App

  • Fediverse @piefed.social

    Just curious, why do people sometimes choose to post to a Lemmy/Mbin/Piefed community on a different instance?