Main account: @Blaze@reddthat.com
Nice list!
My theory is that if we start with an up-to-date list, we can crowdsource updates without too much trouble. In theory?
One way to do this could be to have a GitHub repo where the list is hosted. That way if someone wants to update it, they create a pull request that can be accepted by the moderating team
Disclaimer, I’m not the parent, @yads@lemmy.ca is
Wait, there were Lemmy stickers?
Also they have a Matrix room, you can maybe ask there: https://matrix.to/#/#infodesk:fosdem.org
Good question. They have a Youtube channel, but don’t seem to use it that much: https://www.youtube.com/@fosdemtalks/videos
Nice that you enjoyed it!
I’m open to discussion, let’s see what their reaction is
Hello,
You can try to crosspost on !cs_career_questions@programming.dev
Interesting, thanks!
On my side, I’m mostly invested in !lego@lemmy.world. I also lurk !warhammer40k@lemmy.world as they have beautiful painted figures
I appreciate the effort, but what is happening is option 1, aka merging of communities, naturally.
About knowing where to post, you can usually have a look at https://lemmyverse.net/communities, search the community name, and have a good idea of which one is the most active.
Sometimes different communities can coexist, and that’s fine. !science@mander.xyz and !science@lemmy.world have different audiences, and that’s okay.
Would you like to share some of those communities? Maybe we have interest in common
That’s a nice roadmap
Alright, I’ll ask first and see how they answer!
(you are forgiven, we still love you <3)
Thank you <3
Hello!
I know you are the person who made the pinned post in !knitting@lemmy.world, would you have any suggestion on where to post such content?
There is probably no reason now, but hopefully in the near future Sublinks will reach feature parity with Lemmy, and could even surpass it. Technological stack can have a huge impact on the development speed of a project.
In other words, let’s wait and see
Java, Go, TypeScript, and HTML
Different technologies. Rust is a more niche language, which is sometimes used to explain why there aren’t that many contributors to Lemmy
Makes sense, let us know about the progress on your project, seems promising!
That’s interesting.
The demo indeed looks very much like Lemmy, I guess the changes are mostly in the back-end side: https://demo.sublinks.org/
!dundermifflin@lemm.ee for fans of the Office