I hope we can replace him. I wanted Garcia to win. Eric Adams is a fool.
I hope we can replace him. I wanted Garcia to win. Eric Adams is a fool.
There’s no shortage of things to make up, it’s their biggest strength.
Someone should just ask them to stop doing that!
The article touches briefly on it, essentially even though a minority wants these terrible policies, that minority are the GOP base and are generally single issue voters and religious. That minority has an outsized say due to gerrymandering. And there is also a feedback loop in this country where the GOP gerrymanders, they cut education and other social services, blame the “enemy” for the downturn in QOL for their constituents, and repeat. It solidifies the us vs them mentality that has these people voting against their own interests.
Obviously super simplified outlook on it since it is a very complex issue. Other people in the thread have explained better.
The reason they are able to do this comes down to gerrymandering.
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/abortion-ruling-puts-spotlight-on-gerrymandered-legislatures
Something’s changed, but if we close our eyes and stick our fingers in our ears we can continue business as usual
Apparently, you have to live it
No truer words.
I mean if on Pixelfed you @pics@lemmy.world, what happens if there’s a user with that name. Does it post to the community or send a message to the user somehow?
On lemmy communities start with !
while users start with … but it looks like you used
to reference the community
What happens if someone creates a user with the same name as the community?
This is pessimistic but it seems to me that Florida is absolutely and incredibly fucked. It’s not even an uphill battle to protect the keys and Everglades, it seems unwinnable without absolutely massive and rapid global shifts, or am I just a doomer?
This will make the 3 people who actually used Cortana mildly disgruntled.
You’re the one speculating. You can analyze your network traffic to ensure it disabled, and as people have done and verified that it is disabled. Those are standard Google Ad trackers. Any app with ads has them, like Sync for Reddit did and Sync for Lemmy does.
This might not be a popular opinion, but I had a very short period of time between graduating school and starting work where I needed to learn docker and I found this course: https://serversforhackers.com/shipping-docker to be very helpful, they had a sale and I got the course and it taught me everything I needed in a few days.
You absolutely don’t need a course to learn it, but sometimes these can be easy shortcuts.
I write data pipeline code and there is zero downtime. We use kafka to buffer messages from dozens of producers to dozens of consumers on kubernetes.
For anyone coming across this, remove seemed to work. Purging clears the “remove” status it looks like and other instances won’t know you removed it and keep federating data to you. At least that’s what it seems like was happening
I was thinking about this the other day, if traditional forums adopt activity pub it can really open the fediverse up to niche communities with larger and already established user bases. I think it’s a logical progression of the technology.
If there’s truly XSS vulnerabilities in lemmy that would be really bad. It’s one of the first things an attacker will try and it’s so easy to protect against.
Nope, I notice it reappear in the community list. If I just remove the community without purge though then the new content stops coming in, so I’ve just left them as removed without purging
It’s okay for very small groups of people in my experience. I use two servers with like ~10 active users in total. We use the server as a way to keep group text-like conversations more organized in different channels based on topic and the added benefit of voice calls and chat bots.
Large communities for it are awful, it becomes an even harder to read Twitch chat in active channels.
Both. The text data is in the database of all instances that are federated. Your account credentials are only stored on the instance you’re registered to.