peter

joined 1 year ago
[–] peter@lemmy.emerald.show 2 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

Very interesting read, it showcases how big tech can grow more aware of the "threat" of the Fediverse and how they might act.

UPDATE: Those rumours have been confirmed as at least one Mastodon admin, kev, from fosstodon.org, has been contacted to take part in an off-the-record meeting with Meta. He had the best possible reaction: he refused politely and, most importantly, published the email to be transparent with its users. Thanks kev!

What a hero, whoever you are!

[–] peter@lemmy.emerald.show 3 points 9 months ago

Finally someone that get's it

[–] peter@lemmy.emerald.show 1 points 10 months ago

Nice, cool to see more people have an arm Lemmy instance

[–] peter@lemmy.emerald.show 1 points 10 months ago

Yeah it's mostly performance related. I have like 10 different websites running all at once, and while CPU and RAM aren't 100% all the time, with a heavy load I don't have enough free to do it

[–] peter@lemmy.emerald.show 3 points 10 months ago

I wish the Pinebook Pro was updated cause I'd give that a shot. Or better, an ARM powered Framework laptop

[–] peter@lemmy.emerald.show 21 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (5 children)

I replaced my old Intel Core i7 HP ProLiant server with an Odroid M1 (ARM Based) and it consumes 2 watts compared to 72 that the Intel Server did.

The only thing I can't do with it is my Minecraft server, it runs all else perfectly. Even the Lemmy instance of this account is powered by the same server! And what's more it basically runs for free, as solar generates enough power for the server to consume, even when it's cloudy.

Yes, I believe Intel should be afraid.

[–] peter@lemmy.emerald.show 6 points 1 year ago

I actually like Flatpaks... I use dpkg/apt-get for system packages that cannot be installed in userspace, and flatpaks for desktop apps / games. Many distro's have unified ways to update them anyway (at least VanillaOS has)

[–] peter@lemmy.emerald.show 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It was an idea indeed. Like a daily post per user, or even go as far as to synchronize it across users (so each user has a moment to post a new post). This is interesting, and I'm thinking about how to do it!

[–] peter@lemmy.emerald.show 4 points 1 year ago

I want to be a good citizen here so if there's anything else I can help with let me know

[–] peter@lemmy.emerald.show 3 points 1 year ago

Thanks! I also felt it was the most ethical thing to do. This way you can refer to any comments made to your post, but we don't copy comments over ourselves (which potentially can violate users privacy if they don't want their comments to leave Reddit)

[–] peter@lemmy.emerald.show 4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

It will keep the current date due to users not being able to override a timestamp, but the top part of a post shows the original date and link to the original post: https://lemmy.emerald.show/post/764

 

This tool lets you migrate your own posts from any subreddit to any Lemmy community you want, I made it because I couldn't find anything else that did it the way I wanted to. I'm super happy how it turned out, I managed to get 9 years worth of posts over this way...

The GitHub link shows how to use it in case you want to!

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