Cris @ Cris_Color @lemmy.world Posts 58Comments 2,400Joined 2 yr. ago

Louis Rossman reads the new Texas right to repair bill that passed
Helping a friend switch- what do I need to know about nvidia graphics in Linux?
Into sewing? Here's a giant map of secondhand fabric stores by city! (USA & Canada)
I'm falling asleep or I'd go grab a link but I believe !webrevival@lemm.ee has a discussion post now, I think I saw it a minute ago
If we're going to I agree with the other commenter about only recent or really popular posts. And I'd spread them out a bit so they don't overwhelm organic content
I don't think it's important to have every single post duplicated again.
I'll have to sit down when I have a moment and see if it's possible to create an account or if there's an instance up yet!!
Oh nice! I've been thinking about migrating for a while but that's one of the big things I needed to figure out
Though I was kinda thinking about switching over to .ee, which, maybe not the call anymore lol 😅
Fuck yeah 😊
Lol, no worries. Hope you have a lovely day!
Man, I hope so. There are so many cool historical events that need movie adaptations
By the way, it's ActivityPub, like activity publication, or public activity :)
Lemmy, piefed, and mbin are all similar pieces of software that run on a server.
They are each capable of hosting a small social network website with a similar reddit-like format. They all also support the activitypub standard, which means that they can be linked together, so that when you go to one of those social media sites (lemmy.world for example) you can see any other site that they're "federated" with, even if that social media site is powered by a different software that supports activitypub (I'm on lemmy.world but I can see communities and posts from piefed.social)
I generally call lemmy, mbin and piefed "fediverse platforms" because they're each a platform that you can make a fediverse account on, but that usage is a bit imperfect, since each individual site could also be described as a platform, and is where your account is actually hosted. You could be more specific and call them "fediverse/federated link aggregators" if you wanted to specifically refer to the ones with a similar format to reddit.
These pieces of software are different because they're built in different ways (different languages and underlying structure), have different priorities, and as software projects are run in different ways with different leadership, all of which is how you get differences in features and implementation. Lemmy is the oldest of these similar platforms, and as such is the most established. In the open source world it's very easy and common to end up with a lot of fragmented similar projects. Its both a blessing and a curse.
There isn't perfect language for all these things because in the grand scheme of things, it's a rather new way for social media platforms to work, so the language around how to describe or refer to these things hasn't really "settled"
It can federate with lemmy, essentially just being another type of node in the same web of individual websites.
Some of those sites are hosted with lemmy, some are hosted with piefed, some are hosted with mbin.
Each of those (lemmy, piefed, mbin) is a piece of software that can run as a "server" for a social media site, and can use the activitypub protocol to talk to other sites that are federated together making the contents of other sites visible. They can federate regardless of whether the software powering the site is the same or not.
I very much know about it, their presence makes my rosacea upset 🥲
Thats why every other day I muder them all with an anti-paracitic cream
Man, Ukraine has really been on some action movie shit lately, ya love to see it.
Congrats, that's super cool! My best friend and her wife voted for the first time this past US election after growing up in a religious sect that doesn't allow it
Ayyy, let's go!
What a neat lil guy!
He gave hotdogs a cameltoe...
I think it's just a child being anxious. Bees don't really wanna sting people, they kill themselves in doing so. But people find them scary so I wouldn't be surprised to see someone standing still if one landed on them, hoping not to upset it.
But they're not really likely to land on you cause you're a bad place to land, and unless it's something territorial and/or you're seen as a threat to their nest they don't really wanna sting you either. (Not sure if there are any bees in that category but there are certainly wasps, which also don't die when they sting you)
I'm not really convinced many IDF soldiers are facing significant risk of losing their life, at least in combat- my impression has been that they and Hamas aren't exactly evenly matched in terms of resources 😅
I could absolutely be wrong, I'm not terribly well informed on the conflict and what combat casualties each side has suffered
Interesting, thanks for the paper link, I'll have to come back to that!