This is one of the opinions of all time.
Chozo
@renwillis The Fediverse is more than just the collective network. It's also the individual communities, some of which no longer exist right now. Those communities are now scrambling to figure out what to do.
Yes, the whole of the Fediverse is just fine. But the overall health of the Fediverse relies heavily on the health of individual communities.
@renwillis I'm not so sure this is a "win", since the Fediverse wasn't specifically targeted by any entity involved to begin with. If anything, it's just a straight-up loss to the communities that have to reassemble themselves under a new domain again, many of whom were probably mostly new users to the Fediverse to begin with, and are likely to be turned off by this experience. If anything, this just exposes that the Fediverse is significantly sustained by flimsy, free/cheap platforms that are vulnerable to disappearing without any notice. That doesn't exactly instill faith.
It's a really bad look, to be perfectly honest.
Oh man, last one that made me do that was probably Zork III. I was hand-drawing my own maps to navigate that game. I miss those days.
I just love how Sony always manages to name their products something completely indistinguishable from any other product they make.
but like who doesn’t use an AdBlocker these days
Hard to do from a game console or Chromecast, which happen to be the two methods I use most often for watching YouTube.
I believe it's a sync issue between instances. Eventually, his comment should update and show as deleted on the instance you're viewing from. New material seems to sync immediately across most instances, but edits/deletions appear to be lower-priority and take longer. Some mod actions like thread removals also don't appear to sync correctly right away.
At least, that's been my experience, not sure how much truth there is to that. I'm using Kbin, which is also a bit weird with Lemmy content in the first place (for instance, Kbin apparently does not recognized locked threads from other instances, and will still let you comment, though they won't appear on the original instance at all).
It's a limited-time event that Reddit occasionally does where users can all draw on a large, shared board, one pixel at a time. There's a time limit on how often you can draw a single pixel. A lot of subreddits would get together to organize and plan out images for their communities to draw. And since it's a single, shared whiteboard, you have a lot of communities competing with each other over space and vandalizing each other's works. Then usually at the end Reddit will create a full-size PNG of the "completed" work and end the event.
It's usually seen as a melting pot of the communities, where people could get together and interact with groups they probably wouldn't have otherwise. Launching this now, when they're facing so much backlash over a slew of ridiculous policy changes that have forced many users off the platform, is an incredibly delusional move on their part.
There are two things that Reddit wants to do with opening /r/Place again:
1: Trick the users into thinking that Reddit still cares about the community that they've nickeled and dimed off the platform
2: Force more people into using the official app and new web layout, since /r/Place can't be interacted with using third-party apps or old.reddit
Aside from having visualizers, how is this at all like Winamp?
Yeah, I wanna see how things shake out once Meta decides to federate. I think Mastodon's going to see some pretty significant shifts when that happens.
Who’re you hoping to follow? I might be able to recommend a few folks.
That's the thing for me, is that I don't actually have anybody in particular that I want to follow. I was never a Twitter user, so I don't really have a list of accounts that I'm looking for. But as a user exploring the platform, it's always good to see names that you recognize, even if you aren't intimately interested in them.
On Twitter, if I came across a post from someone like Bill Nye, for example, I at least know who that is and what they do, and what impact that has in regards to their opinion. But on Mastodon, the top post on my feed will be from Charles Shoemaker, an Arch Linux developer with a passion for backyard composting (just making the name up, sorry to any Charles Shoemakers out there who I have just slandered). As somebody who may be just browsing the platform idly, it makes it harder to care about the content I'm seeing, if I have no idea who the people are or why I should feel connected to them.
Obviously, that's what a lot of people come here for, though. And I also get that and think it's great, but I think that it would be better-suited to a longer-form platform (perhaps a Fedi-platform that's formatted a bit more like old versions of Facebook, when they still had a focus on user-to-user engagement). I feel like microblogging is meant for feed-scrolling behavior, but the majority of Mastodon users want it to be more like full-blog engagement. Though, I'm still exploring that part of the Fediverse myself, so maybe I'm just looking at it through a narrow lens right now.
I just wish YouTube Music would get better integration with more services. I really enjoy being able to seamlessly play Spotify on my PS5 while I'm playing games, and listening along with friends on Discord is also way easier on Spotify. If YouTube Music could get similar integrations, I'd probably drop Spotify, since I'm already paying for YouTube Premium as it is.