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bastion,

Be careful not to cross that line of request vs desperation.

Like on YouTube - A tasteful “don’t forget to like and subscribe” is fine, but mentioning it multiple times during a video is just increasingly demanding or cringe.

bastion, (edited )

I think this might be interesting:

  • permit separate, low-traffic, highly rate-limited, auth-only servers. They would be strictly rate-limited and only accept connections from whitelisted partner servers, because they only handle auth.
  • any partner server can authenticate a user and handle content for the server/auth-server pair, but only does so under certain conditions (determined by the partner - all the time, when ping api call > n seconds, or manually, for example)
  • [email protected] can’t log in, so the client tries the list of partnered servers. user succeeds at lemmy.partner.net.
  • [email protected]@partner.net says… ‘…something’ and all other servers accept it as being from [email protected]
  • lemmy.world recovers, and claims all of the @lemmy[email protected] posts. Partners then forget the extra stuff they’ve been hosting.
bastion,

A lot of those issues of ‘multiple primaries’ can be resolved with intelligent data types and actions. That is, if we have a notion of how the data is organized, a lot of decisions can be made a priori. Ones that can’t can be read-only during a split.

Comment groups are mergeable sets. Any unique comment is a valid comment.

For any individual comment, any tombstone causes a comment to be unseeable (and ideally be deleted). Any edits are latest-wins.

A lot can be sorted out that way - enough to be usable. Some databases even support that on a db level.

bastion,

fwiw, I’m now pretty darn happy with Linux and gaming. Granted, I use Steam, so there’s that.

There are issues sometimes, but I just keep a copy of windows around for windows-only things. Generally, Linux “just works” for me, but I’ve also learned to just skip it when something requires too much involvement to get working.

bastion,

Meh. Most of the top comments are pretty reasonable.

bastion,

If you do try Linux:

  • buy hardware that’s supported. For some things (storage) virtually everything works. For others, (video cards, latest-gen wifi) you need to make sure it’s supported out-of-the-box. It’s not worth the headache of trying to get it to work unless you just like geeking out.
  • if some piece if software or hardware doesn’t work, it doesn’t work. If you spend more than a half hour (or whatever your limit is) trying to get it to work, just say to yourself ‘not available on Linux right now’ and move on. Linix has way more access to beta and alpha-level stuff, and that can make it tempting to try to fix whatever problem. Just don’t bother.

That said, most of the systems I use Linux on, it just works.

About the antiwork ~~spam~~ flood that we just got on the local front page...

I explained the situation to the poster where I told him that antiwork posts take too much space on the front page of our instance. Posts from antiwork shouldn’t now take too much space unless more people start posting at which point it will be impossible to slow down sublemmy and it will settle down on the front page...

bastion,

It’s been a little annoying. Anyways, thanks for thinking of FMHY.

What video game have you played the most, that you think is garbage and no one else should ever play?

I have played Eve Online so many hours, and it’s a bad game. Don’t do it. you will spend hundreds of hours dreaming about the cool thing you’ll do later, but for 99% of players the cool thing will never happen. You will be part of the one percent’s cool thing....

bastion,

Stellaris. Extremely long games, a lot to learn… …and they change it. Mechanics that worked before stop working. The bad parts are added to same become a DLC, the good parts disappear or are algal paved in DLC. Overall, it just doesn’t feel worth it.

bastion,

Hey there!

From the home screen, at the top shpuld be ‘[email protected].’. You can also select ‘[email protected]’. That will show you a feed from everyone FMHY is federated with.

If two inatances you like block each other, you can get accounts on both. The entries have a ‘via fmhy…’ Or ‘via sh.itjust.works’ for whatever instances you have listed in your configuration. Long-press on instance name in configuration to delete it if you don’t want it. I deleted lemmy.world, because I can just see lemmy.world stuff in ‘all’ via fmhy.

Technically, it’s not federation, it’s confederation, but we have some bad history with that word.

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