@ericbandrews@lemmy.ml avatar

ericbandrews

@[email protected]

Dev lead for Mlem, the iOS Lemmy client

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ericbandrews,
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Based on

ericbandrews,
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I’m one of the Mlem devs–not yet, but it’s on our roadmap–its planned to be implemented within the next couple of weeks.

ericbandrews,
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Yes! You can find it in Settings -> Content Filtering. We’ve got plans for more robust filtering in the works as well.

ericbandrews,
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Mlem is SwiftUI and FOSS! I know there are some issues with the current App Store build (weeps in janky scrolling) but we’ve got a major update hitting beta tomorrow and the App Store as soon as Apple will allow that’s going to fix it.

ericbandrews,
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We’ve got that feature in testing right now, we’re hoping to have it out to the App Store in the next couple days!

ericbandrews,
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Well this article just isn’t right at all

I drive an entry level EV (Hyundai Kona) that advertises 4mi/kWh, which is roughly accurate (2-3 in the winter, 5-7 in the summer). That’s 25 kWh for 100 miles.

Average cost of electricity in the US is, according to a quick Google, somewhere between $.15 and $.25 per kWh; where I live it’s a steeper $.33.

Therefore, depending on where I charge, I’m paying anywhere between $3.75 and $8.25 to drive 100 miles–$1.50 short of the article’s published $9.78 even with my expensive power.

In reality, though, I pay nothing–my office offers free charging. Show me an office with free gas.

ericbandrews,
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Mlem dev here—couldn’t agree more about Gavin, he’s a fantastic guy. Gave us some helpful tips about getting through App Store review. Massive props to him for getting that app up and running so fast.

ericbandrews,
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It’s coming! We’ve got development slated to start early August, it should enter TestFlight beta sometime shortly after then.

ericbandrews,
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Thanks for the download, and I hope you enjoy it! We’re firm believers in the native Swift experience, even though it takes a little longer to develop in

ericbandrews,
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Funny you should mention that, I’m actually working on implementing that exact feature right now! It’ll be out in the next build.

ericbandrews,
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Good news–we decided that “some support is better than none,” and quietly released the iPad app to the App Store as well. It’s not perfect–we’re pretty heavily leaning on SwiftUI’s automagic cross-platform–and while we finish filling out our core features it’s not going to get much dev time, but come 1.2 we’ll make it all nice and shiny

ericbandrews,
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You bet! You can check out our GitHub milestones for a high-level roadmap and our Project Board for the current state of development

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