I use a Misskey fork for micro blogging and I can’t even get Lemmy posts to load. The profiles of communities do, but that’s it.
I use a Misskey fork for micro blogging and I can’t even get Lemmy posts to load. The profiles of communities do, but that’s it.
There’s a lava flow on the other side of the barrier that was built. It’s inching into the new construction at the edge of the town and has already consumed one house. Probably it will keep going, possibly to the harbor.
Will existing projects have to adapt their codebases to work with ActivityPods? I assume yes.
Depends on the language. There is no explicit typing in JavaScript, for example. That’s why Typescript was invented.
So is there a way to follow someone on Threads now? Or at least get one’s instance to load a post? Where are the details of this beyond Zuckerberg’s post?
But wouldn’t you calculate the time in the future in the right time zone and then store it back as UTC?
Can just use an external image host in the meantime.
Your instance probably has a very low upload size limit
Edit: lemm.ee has a limit of like 100kb.
Tasks.org syncs with various services. Those services may or may not have a web UI. I use it with Nextcloud tasks, which has a serviceable web UI.
If you download it from Fdroid, it doesn’t have a subscription. And it has all the features unlocked.
Am I missing something? Or is the link to this tool not actually present in the post? I only see a screenshot.
But alternatively, it could be easily abused in the opposite direction. Better to just get rid of it and replace with some better voting system in my opinion.
How would allowing electors to vote whatever they want be an improvement over binding them to state law?
Uncapping the house, yes, is a good thing. But I can’t see how allowing unfaithful electors is a good idea.
The API changes were coming, and the increasingly deranged decisions and actions of the CEO and administration just made me switch over in mid June. Just stopped using it. Haven’t looked back since.
Did also delete as many comments as possible via API before they shut it down.
Not doing anything drastic like blocking Reddit via extension or DNS. Just not using it and trying not to give more traffic to the site.
What is the “official” justification for such a ridiculous move?
One feature that might help with this is something similar to multi-reddits, where users can categorize communities into their own “meta communities”.
Depends on the continuity and who’s writing it, but often yes. He was notably portrayed this way in the Justice League cartoon.