a bit of a late post today but i've been exceedingly busy working on some important stuff on the side and that's taken up most of my time. things are going pretty good currently and are generally productive.
I've been spending some time considering the future technology stack of Beehaw. I'd love to work on some kind of moderation tools, especially because I know that they could be inserted alongside the existing codebase - even if in an exceedingly hacky way. Heck, even client side site scraping with content matching is an option if for some horrible reason we had to.
The fun part is not being able to ask those who run the server about specifics for what's needed.
The fun part is not being able to ask those who run the server about specifics for what’s needed.
What do you mean by that? Here's a list of some needs; here's more, and others. Beehaw admin are pretty vocal about the specifics of what's needed. If you can code on the stack that Lemmy is in, proficiently, moderator tooling is definitely a sore spot that needs some attention.
Oooo thank you for the links, that's the part I had a difficult time with. I don't think I'm subscribed to enough things, or I don't check frequently enough, to get the information updates.
I'll see what I'm qualified to do. I don't know Rust in particular so this is likely to turn into a rabbit hole that produces nothing but a greater knowledgebase in my brain for the next time I get fiesty about something.
It's kinda funny. I was a mod on reddit (I guess technically still am) and I've always felt that mod tools on reddit were very poor. Having to use Toolbox and RES and such. And moderating on the go from the official app was garbage (thank god for Apollo).
Then I get here to Beehaw, where I volunteer to mod again. And I find the mod tools are even worse! I get that most people didn't leave reddit because of poor mod tools. It was the API and content moderation issues that drove people away. But still, I was expecting Lemmy to have at least equal capabilities.
But still, I was expecting Lemmy to have at least equal capabilities.
the project was admittedly a lot more manageable previously when it had a fraction of the users it has now, but it's still definitely bizarre to come to what is essentially a four year old project and find nothing but the barest of barebones tools.