notanapple

joined 2 months ago
[–] notanapple@lemm.ee 1 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

hey dont even mention it, thank you and thank you for helping the community grow!

[–] notanapple@lemm.ee 4 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago)

They should at least make a docs tag or similar and tag all these documentation like posts with it.

[–] notanapple@lemm.ee 1 points 4 weeks ago

Another thing is that my laptop might be using Legacy BIOS, so systemd isn't compatible with it.

Oh sorry, then Fedora isnt a good idea. They have deprecated support for Legacy BIOS.

Anything with LXQT 2.1 available should give the same experience however right now it seems only rolling distros ship with 2.1. Lubuntu 25.04 will ship (in ~April) with LXQT 2.1 but it wont default to wayland so you might have to do some manual config. Its also not an lts release.

storage requirements

shouldn't be a big problem. lxqt is super lightweight. If you go with lubuntu, I recommend turning off snap to save some space.

Linux Mint MATE or XFCE are really good if you dont necessarily want wayland support.

Another option is the Raspberry Pi OS. Debian based, should be very lightweight and runs wayland. I haven't personally tried it though.

[–] notanapple@lemm.ee 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (2 children)

try Fedora LXQT too, it ll default to wayland in the next fedora release (~4th april i think), and its very lightweight

[–] notanapple@lemm.ee 9 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I think piefeds combined view makes this less of an issue. Like people subscribe to/post in the big communities because they are more active so get more comments and stuff. But in piefed you get the combined discussion from all the communities so you get the same experience even if you are subscribed to a less popular community on that topic.

[–] notanapple@lemm.ee 40 points 1 month ago (10 children)

I dont think its the software* but the instance that matters. Everyone being on lw is not good (not that there is anything wrong with lw, just that centralization is bad). Thankfully most lemmy apps nowadays default to lemm.ee which should hopefully counter most of the centralization. Lemmy apps should rotate the default server when it gets too big which will help a lot (also shows the impact defaults have).

*Software would have mattered if the main devs instance was also the biggest. Or a very popular lemmy client defaulted to their own instance. With lemmy thats not the case.

[–] notanapple@lemm.ee 95 points 1 month ago (34 children)

Subreddits were not a problem before since they were accessible on the web without needing an account. But now reddit is gradually locking them down behind authwalls and things like not letting search engines index (other than Google).

Lemmy communities dont have this problem and because lemmy is federated, its resistant to such enshittification (plus you can easily create your own lemmy instance for only your team). So imo they are a good alternative to forums (and reddit) and a good solution to this problem.

[–] notanapple@lemm.ee 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Discourse already exists (and most big companies use that).

Also you can see many other things on Reddit or Discord too (or the internet). Im not sure how that is a point against federation. If companies really want to control everything they can create their own instance (like KDE's lemmy instance).

They can defederate everyone from their instance to get an "unfederated" instance but again it changes nothing imo.

In fact defederation is a negative since now you have to worry about new signups, moderation, etc. While in a federated instance, you can leave moderation to other instances and only allow team/company members on your instance. Users can sign up on other instances and still be able to interact with your instance for support, help and other stuff.

[–] notanapple@lemm.ee 13 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Enabling this feature will probably require you to agree to Google AI training on your emails.

[–] notanapple@lemm.ee 11 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Element is an app for "Matrix" (thats like lemmy but for discord) that is developed by a for-profit company (the company mostly manages deployments for big governments). But not only is it open source, its just one client of many for matrix. The vast majority are developed by individuals (Cinny, FluffyChat).

Plus, it's not even remotely similar to Discord.

There are probably discord features missing from matrix but they certainly have a lot of similarities. Though tbf Cinny is the closest to discord in terms of design and functionality not element (but they both are matrix clients).

[–] notanapple@lemm.ee 5 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

So this post has (at the time of writing this post):

  • 0 favorites on mastodon
  • 101 upvotes on lemmy (2 downvotes)
  • 9 replies on mastodon (7 lemmy instances, 2 mastodon)
  • 8 replies on lemmy (7 lemmy, 1 mastodon)

From this I would say it looks like lemmy upvotes dont federate at all with mastodon. Replies seem to federate but for some reason 1 reply from mastodon is missing on lemmy.

[–] notanapple@lemm.ee 42 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Its on the roadmap. AFAIK it requires vector layers before it can be worked on.

view more: ‹ prev next ›