• 5 Posts
  • 26 Comments
Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: February 16th, 2021

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  • I think it brings up a wider point of what technical policies each of the servers choose to follow (or not follow), giving users transparency to see what is and is not being done (e.g. accepting requests from opposite instances to delete comments).

    In the long term, I foresee server operators of larger Lemmy instances with similar views to eventually come together as a collective and integrate properly with each other.




  • Jerboa is on its way to do that, I think. I already have two of my accounts logged in through that app, though the feeds are obviously separate.

    I think it’s also a matter of the larger instances working together collectively by choosing to federate with each other, and have opt-in features, including some potential SSO-like feature to link login credential databases of users between instances (in some capacity), and potentially allowing synchronization of post data between instances for trusted and well-moderated Communities.

    The SSO part is definitely hard though. It would be a one-way street and instances would not really be able to back out of the opt-in nature of it without creating a headache for its users.







  • You mean after unplugging from your car’s Android Auto? I’ve noticed this behavior before, where I take my phone out of my pocket and it asks me for my PIN and then has to boot into the phone again. It is completely random for me and doesn’t seem to be related to Android Auto though.

    If it’s happening after unplugging from Android Auto consistently it may be related.




  • Yeah, if anything I’m enjoying watching the way this dumpster fire plays out. I’ll probably hang on for as long as I can and keep using my Relay Pro app until reddit fizzles away on June 30th, then overwrite all my comments or erase my accounts.

    What’s happening is for the best. It’s better to just accept that reddit is no longer, and that we can foster real communities within Lemmy that can no longer be taken away from us by CEO’s with micropeens. Power can now be distributed collectively into the fediverse without the need for advertising or data collection. The future of the internet is in the federated internet 😊



  • hackitfastOPMtoGoogle PixelSo why do you have a Pixel?
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    1 year ago

    Yeah battery is one of my complaints as well. It can’t really handle heavy use, but if you’re doing medium amounts of messaging or calling through the day it’ll get you from 8 am to 11pm easy, maybe 20% left by then.

    Camera on this phone is absolutely god tier though.






  • hackitfasttoRedditSo, how do we think this ends?
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    1 year ago

    Here’s my take, I grabbed it from my reddit comment, it’s slightly out of context so excuse that:

    I do think reddit will continue to function, but its communities and services will undoubtedly begin to change following July 1st as users begin to shift to different platforms like Lemmy, Kbin, and Squabbles.

    And don’t think that as reddit aims for quarterly growth, they won’t try to pull more shit on their users. It’s only a matter of time before reddit is an amalgamation of Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.

    RPAN probably failed because either nobody wanted to use their first party app, or were using old.reddit.com. RPAN was their first attempt at reddit trying to “catch the waves” of services like YouTube Shorts, TikTok, and Instagram Reels. The most recent r/place was the second attempt at getting people to use their mobile app.

    Expect reddit to keep adding “trend catching” features over the next year or so while you’re confined to reddit.com without RES, and reddits mobile app. Unfortunately, reddit will eventually it will be a shell of what reddit once was, and the users that choose to stay will be the ones willing to put up with their shit.

    So yes, of course the point is to make money! Though it will almost always be poorly reflected on its users, and they’ll go any length to make sure they’re doing just enough to keep you here but not enough for you to want to leave. Users will make their decision to stay or leave over the coming months as you see this “enshiftification”.

    Here’s a good article on this, it’s very interesting:

    https://www.wired.com/story/tiktok-platforms-cory-doctorow/




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