
Hereβs a helpful chart:
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Wtf is $hitposting

To be clear, u/fuckswithducks had a rubber duck fetish, so no actual ducks were involved in that specific case. Though I get your point.

Community-wise thereβs [email protected]

The Reddit post (content is removed)

The price? Yes.
The tip prompt? Well, no. Unless you feel like mailing an extra $20 cash to Nintendo

Here in the UK we have slashes through many of the red-bordered road signs, but not all of them. People often misunderstand the ones that don't - for instance, these mean "no motor vehicles" and "no cars" respectively:

The council probably collects a lot of money in fines from people misunderstanding those two in particular

You can read up on the conversation on the GitHub issue here.
TL;DR: the current system on the (unreleased) 1.0 codebase is that your Lemmy instance will replace all Lemmy URLs in posts/comments with the equivalent URLs on your own instance. In the issue I linked, some concerns are raised about this system and various other options are discussed. Itβs possible that the way it works will change before Lemmy 1.0 is released.

You're welcome :)

Iβm also curious about the country distribution on lemmy.
I'm a developer for an iOS Lemmy client. The distribution of our downloads by territory is as follows (sample size >18k):
- 50.2% US
- 9.9% Germany
- 5.8% UK
- 5.2% Canada
- 3.5% Australia
- 25.4% other
Biases:
- It only counts users who are using that specific app, which:
- Is only available on iOS, so Android users aren't counted. This could have a significant effect on the results because iOS has a much higher market share in the US than, say, Germany.
- Could be ranked differently in App Store search results in different regions.
- Only supported English, until very recently. Users who prefer a different language may have chosen an app that supports their language.
- It includes users who downloaded the app but later stopped using Lemmy, which isn't ideal.
Back in 2023 lemmy.ca did a survey of their users, which you may find interesting.

Lemmy doesnβt support this natively, but many clients do. Off the top of my head:
- Tesseract (desktop)
- Voyager (web frontend designed for mobile. I believe you need to install the app rather than using the website to use keyword filters)
- Mlem (iOS)
- Arctic (iOS)
- Thunder (Android & iOS)
- Sync (Android; Iβve heard Sync is unmaintained though)
Assuming you're on desktop, Tesseract is probably your best bet. It might also be possible to get Voyager working. Some instances (like sh.itjust.works) run their own Tesseract instances (https://tesh.itjust.works/), but lemm.ee doesn't. You'd have to use some other Tesseract instance, specifically one that allows connecting to any Lemmy instance (https://tesh.itjust.works/ is for sh.itjust.works accounts only). E.g. https://tesseract.dubvee.org/

Graphics cat

The change was merged in Dec 2023 (see here). The Reddit Exodus was in summer 2023.

Worth noting is that what counts as an "active user" has changed between now and then. During the Reddit API exodus, an "active user" was a user who had posted or commented in the past month. Now, it includes users who have voted. If the 54k MAU record was set using the first algorithm, it is likely that the MAU using the new algorithm (which includes voting) would have been much higher.

The cleaning cloth pictured is the one that comes with the particular brand of screen cleaner that Apple recommends using.