you can see for yourself that we see feddit.de stuff: https://lemmy.fmhy.ml/comment/131623
honestly I don’t care about becoming the eye of sauron, I think federation being use it or lose it is a good thing since not all communities/magazines are worth having around imo
it’s not that they’re hardcore marxists but that they are tankies, you can find a lot of discussions about this out there
we can see feddit.de but they cannot see us
feddit.de does (https://feddit.de/instances) due to fmhy being open registration
although not blocked by beehaw despite them also not liking open registration
I think this is closer to federated Discourse rather than phpBB. Not sure if federation is worth it for forums though.
I didn’t do anything
The error message tells you why it failed
It’s really fun but still kinda rough around the edges. I wish there other games like this that are fully fleshed out and complete.
fmhy
How does it compare to chocolatey?
On Android it’s the only one I’ve found that plays OPUS and organizes by album artist rather than song artist.
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actually funny how intrusive it is
Email with PGP is very far from secure. No forward secrecy (one mistake and the entire thread history is revealed) and metadata is unencrypted.
The declarative abstraction of just setting values of options is very nice but I quickly ran into many edge cases where it leaked, which have been fixed years later. Obviously I don’t want to wait years but I couldn’t figure out how to fix it myself. I was able to overcome the learning curve of all the various hyphenated CLI programs (seriously what’s up with that), how home-manager fits in, basics of the nix language, etc., but got stuck at trying to learn nix well enough to actually contribute.
There’s a huge barrier in straying from the well-trodden path, and I think that path will always be behind the cutting-edge. In traditional distros I just have to install something or edit a text file somewhere. Prime example right now is pytorch with rocm support. In Arch Linux it’s pacman -S python-pytorch-rocm
. In NixOS I barely remember and I don’t think it even worked for me but I think it was this: https://github.com/nixos-rocm/nixos-rocm#installation
I started using dotdrop to track and manage my user and system configurations and wrote a basic ansible playbook for my desktop install setup which has achieved 90% of what I was looking for in NixOS. These days what intrigues me about NixOS is that it might be a great alternative in the server space as a competitor to using docker or wasm.
Yeah I hope they’re joking lol