Which is why all browsers cross identify as other browsers. This would make it easier for sites to block and harder for browsers to work around.
Which is why all browsers cross identify as other browsers. This would make it easier for sites to block and harder for browsers to work around.
You can install the kbin interface as a PWA on mobile, and it works pretty well. There are some kinks for sure, but it’s 100% usable and better than lemmy.
Coming in hot with the real answer as to why it feels that way on the fediverse relative to the rest of the internet.
Power Toys Run (from the paper toys suite) is a fantastic launcher that’s better than the start menu.
Sshfs to Nas? Does that mean you have a persistent ssh session open from your host and are using it as a file system to a self hosted Nas at your home? Or did I misunderstand that?
I suspect those are OPs urls, and showing them could allow someone to identify the company or site they work for.
Where do you think is a reasonable price? Search is something most folks use daily, multiple times per day. If the quality of results is good, that seems like a small price to pay. Netflix is pushing 20 a month, and many other streaming services are in the 10—15 range.
From kbin, you can just boost it right from the web site.
Classic Kohl’s strategy, not sure if they did it first, but its the first place I saw it used in early 2000s.
I hadn’t heard that stag from Twitter, but I really do hope that is how it is on reddit and that the content generating users have begin making the switch. Sadly, I think some of reddit recent rise in popularity attracted some folks there only for views so they’ll probably stay. Hopefully their content isn’t much to miss.
This is by design. They’ve got us arguing about the api price, when their goal was to kill off third party apps and get all users on their app so they can data mine us. And the ridiculous api price is a secondary bonus for them, since AI and LLM companies will gladly pay it to sick up the content on the platform.
Depends on your use case. If you just want the content removed from their database (assuming they aren’t tracking versions or edits themselves) then a few hour bake is probably sufficient. Realistically probably good to delete immediately after the edit, but better to be safe and wait.
The more difficult to quantify problem are reddit content sucker’s that have copied content from reddit, and there maybe no deleting from those unless they refresh data directly which is unlikely.
First announced casualty of the reddit api fiasco. Sync was the only acceptable way to browse reddit and without killing time on the internet won’t be the same.
Tinder I get, but Instagram for hookups? Cmon now.
If that’s what ultimately happens, that’s OK. A worst case scenario is them back peddling enough to keep things going and just roll out their plan over a longer duration to avoid a mass exodus of the contributing users.
That wasn’t a bug, that’s exactly why that was done. So you can’t tell what’s actually popular with folks vs. something promoted.
I believe programming.dev is the main instance for all programming related communities that left reddit.