One slice remaining photo is a real testament to the pizza!
Another traveler of the wireways.
One slice remaining photo is a real testament to the pizza!
I’m of multiple minds on it, but the short of it is, I don’t feel out of the pop culture loop, I know I’m out of it being around here.
On one hand I don’t mind that, as I’m frustrated by pop culture essentially being mass market culture. It’s not typically something that arises from people interacting and creating together from shared passions, it’s produced and pushed by big businesses. Nothing novel about this observation or frustration, but it’s a vibe I resonate with.
On the other I know if ever you want people to shift into a popular culture produced in the alternative manner mentioned, you gotta accept the transitional situation of entertaining the mass market culture alongside what you’re trying to cultivate. It’s too jarring for many to switch over entirely, and frankly there’s not enough contemporary non-commercial culture to keep people’s interest to justify any attempts at a complete switch.
So in a way, yeah, but also I’m more bummed that it’s so difficult to create an alternative non-commercial pop culture.
'cause capitalism trying to monopolize everybody’s time and make everyone feel they gotta make everything make money
DAE is short for Does anyone else.
So people don’t care as much when you leave your small indie label and join a major. In fact quite the opposite. Good on you for winning against the system.
That’s integrating with the system, not winning against it. Which may be taken how one will.
The game the article is about is FlyKnight.
Gotta love an abandoned place offering free hugs!
You might find the game Gnosia interesting then. It’s a visual novel with a hidden traitor mechanic mixed with a time loop, which is partly there to narratively explain how and why the hidden traitor changes each time.
Hey, good first attempt, especially for an hour session!
Always enjoy Technology Connections videos!
As I understand it, it’s kind of both.
The Bsky Relay costs are because it’s the primary relay, sure, but any relay aiming to handle a mass amount of people, as well as a variety of AppViews, will likely scale similarly in costs. This is because to try to minimize any fragmentation of experience (as one may see with ActivityPub), AT protocol relays act as a central mirror of all the personal data servers connecting to them.
It’s baked into the architecture for the most part, despite some later developments of lighter pseudo-relays that try to reduce some of the overhead. From the outset they’ve said they only really see there being a few large-scale relays due to the operational costs.
Image edit idea: swap out the word racism for bigotry, and switch “the n-word” to slurs. More fully describes the awful.
You would probably be interested in this community, which is trying to do similar: [email protected]
I think this is also in Settings under Language and Appearance, Website appearance, unless this is a stricter setting that ensures it works as desired.
Thanks for the share! Appreciate it cutting right to the substance and emphasis that it’s strictly speculation on their part on the details of what happened.
Btw original video title for those interested:
“Analyzing the Mid-Air Collision Over the Potomac: A Detailed Examination of ATC Communications”
And correct me if i am wrong, but banning a user just stops them from posting, but i thought it did not delete their post history without additional mod action - which i cant see in the modlog
There’s an option when banning a user to also remove their content, albeit unless it’s an admin action I don’t think it would affect their whole post history beyond the specific community.
I’m kind of getting the sense as I look into this that it may be related to how Voyager is rendering the thread, as I’m not able to observe what’s being described from the web interface. That’s another catch in all this, the other apps and interfaces have their own quirks in how they handle rendering things, which itself is typically related to how they work off the base software (Lemmy in this case).
It’s because your account is too new, and it’s related to your instance/site choice. Lemm.ee’s policy regarding image uploads is this:
- Image uploads are enabled 4 weeks after account creation
- Image upload limit is 500kb per image
Edit: why am i forced to upload a photo for a new post?
Which way are you posting? Mobile/web interface? Shouldn’t need to add an image to post…
That aside, regarding your main question:
I think it’s very confusing when a single post appears with different comments on different instances, and have no idea how this works.
A basic reason for the difference in which comments are appearing across different instances/sites is because of delays in networking (federation) between the sites due to a variety of reasons. One of the common ones with the fediverse tends to be the software itself, and sometimes differences in versions’ federation handling. In this case it’s probably because Lemmy World is still running an older version of Lemmy with clunkier federation at Lemmy World’s scale, which causes delays in activities on there updating elsewhere (particularly those hosted in Australia).
Edit:
See also Kichae’s comment for a more detailed explanation, covers how things operate under more ideal conditions.
That’s one productive harvest! 😲
I don’t know the exact neuroscience behind it, but suspect this relates to the fallibility of memory, and whatever goes in in the brain during learning and reasoning.
So you know of multiple bands and songs, you attempt to relate a specific band and song, but because of some murky memories and rough recall, you briefly relate the wrong pieces of information, recognize the mistake, and correct for it. How that process works precisely may vary across people and their methods of recall and knowing.
In a way I suspect that the false-positive you mention may be a sort of synaptic shortcut to the correct information through whatever systems are at play in the brain for this reasoning. For some it may be that this process of rapid error correction is sometimes faster than immediate, accurate recall, or may be more of an unconscious aspect of accurate recall.