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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 5th, 2023

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  • Considering Lemmy’s apparent deep-rooted technical issues, I’d be perfectly fine with Beehaw searching for something else. Leaving Lemmy doesn’t mean leaving the Fediverse, which a lot of people seem to be misunderstanding. It’s sort of a hard requirement for anything Fediverse-related to be about as advanced in terms of mod tools as Mastodon at least, and otherwise, what’s the point? People are focusing way too hard on perceived ideas about “what the community is like” or whatever, look guys, it’s the internet, it’s always like that. Maybe stay away from places as general and wide-ranging as Technology (honestly I’d say that’s the flaw of a good chunk of Lemmy instances and people need to start looking for / creating more specific stuff. It’s out there, please god just look.)

    Ultimately the purpose of Lemmy is to be something like a traditional forum system, but networked in a way that makes those forums highly discoverable. Lemmy achieves that, but if there’s actually technical barriers to content moderation, yeah, that sucks.
















  • Emacs literally calls it’s Vim emulation Evil mode :)
    In all seriousness though, I say Emacs mostly because being a Lisp machine, it’s turing-complete. There’s web browsers in Emacs, PDF readers, email clients, EXWM is literally Emacs as your window manager.
    Also what I’ve realized recently is… Vim keybindings aren’t even that great beyond being modal, anyways. Some dude made an Emacs plugin called Xah-Fly-Keys that makes it modal, but works off of what commands are used often rather than how Vim does stuff like making the “go to the end of the line” key $ for some reason. With Emacs being something you can sort of just live in, I can bring my workflow into it rather than praying that what I’m using has vim key support.

    (Fuck I’m participating in the editor wars, fuck my life)





  • IMO we went wrong as soon as we started trying to turn web browsers into their own mini operating systems. That’s just… not what they were designed to do. The web was designed as a thing that could sent text and links over a network connection. Is the thing that web browsers currently are kind of a good idea? Yeah, sure, but the fact that it’s a web browser seems like exactly what’s led to the “SuperFund disaster”. Everything about the way we’re doing things is terrifyingly hackish and inefficient.


  • This is a complete misunderstanding of what Lemmy and the Fediverse more generally is. It’s quite literally impossible, by design to keep anyone out globally. That’s the whole point. There’s no centralized server where someone can decide “Oh, we’re just gonna prevent this person’s physical hardware from spinning up a Lemmy server and connecting it to the internet”.

    If there were, it’d be like Twitter, or Reddit, or all of the other centralized sites where moderation seems cool until you disagree with their choices in what they do or don’t moderate. Beehaw can moderate things how they please. You could moderate things however you please by spinning up your own little instance and just using it as an account hosting instance. Once again, by design.