Lemmy had around 1000 active users for the first half of 2023.
Lemmy had around 1000 active users for the first half of 2023.
It’s OK dog. The thing is, you figured it out. You’re better off than those that never figured it out. Now you just gotta move on from where you’re at.
Choices - we make them, chances - we take them
Some are mistakes, some we celebrate them
We don’t look back, cause so much we facin
I always stay proud of myself, I’m yelling, “Fuck regret!”
Emo nights are a thing around the US, not sure about the crowd age.
I was expecting to start the batton running, and pass it off to the next idea, or the continuation of the idea.
I think I see what you’re saying. Lemmy is indeed a place where it’s very easy to get involved, and people get involved in different ways. A lot of us just pick a community and start posting regularly. Some of us adopt dormant communities and bring them back to life. Others contribute by becoming mods or admins or setting up their own instances or debugging/coding. Even those people who were giving you reasons why the “transfer your account easily” project was difficult, they were helping you by telling you the challenges involved. Whenever a well-run project is started, you think about the hurdles, risks, and mitigations, then integrate those into your project plan.
I encourage you to keep getting involved. The trick is to find the right level of involvement for you, then sticking with it and seeing it through.
What I do to get around that is: subscribe to communities that are not memes, news, or tech, then read new posts by “subscribed” and “scaled”. When I run out of those, read “all” to find new communities to subscribe to.
I wouldn’t do version control that way, but I’ve used Word to keep track of what I’m working on during integration tasks. It’s nice because you can drop in code, error messages, and screen captures. E.g.: the tool looks like this: (image) but gives an error like this: (error message) and I think the problem is in file.py around lines XYZ: (code snippet) when I run the command (command used), and I think the answer is in (a couple links I found).
I’ll just be happy when we never have to see that guy’s face in the news again.
The article doesn’t say what type of testing they did. Clearly it wasn’t enough.
Why are they all Cathode Ray Tubes? The father should be a flat-screen and the kid should be a phone screen.
Wait, is this the same thing we were ridiculing over on 196? https://lemmy.world/post/18120973
I would abandon the friendship as a pointless endeavor
You’re in luck, you can subscribe to an AI friend instead. /s
“upper management written all over him.” - one of the Bobs
If they gave two captchas, one which they knew the answer and one which they didn’t, they could use the second for training. (Even if you’re paying someone, you want to do that sort of thing when crowdsourcing data, because you never know if the paid person is just screwing around.)
If it’s something like taking apart hardware, videos are great because there are a lot of little details that it’s hard to capture in even a picture.
To do a super upvote you can give Lemmy gold.
Each upvote is also less likely to be a bot.
On the bright side, they save a lot of money on their Coast Guard.
can potentially spot hazards in a home like broken glass on the floor.
There you have it! The killer app for home robotics! This is exactly what everybody’s been calling for. /s
@PugJesus@lemmy.world it’s time to “cross the Rubicon” to full federation!
I didn’t; I made the chart almost a year ago, click on the link above it to see the 11-month-old comment.