

I get address not found.
Edit: I can access the site through Tor. Yay for censorship circumvention!


I get address not found.
Edit: I can access the site through Tor. Yay for censorship circumvention!
Why the hell would you use punctuation?


Seems kind of unnecessary at the end there, doesn’t it? Not like the sentence has anything to do with the country.


It’s how life tends to evolve into crab-like forms. I’m not good at thinking up usernames, so it was the best I came up with. I like the Rust language, and the language’s mascot is a crab. So, my username is about the tendency of codebases to turn to Rust.


What does the “li” after the end of your sentence mean?
Why does everyone seem to regard the em dash as an instant LLM-indicator? Many real people—me included—use them regularly. Yes, LLMs use them—perhaps too much—but many so-called “AI-tells” come from training data—real text written by real people.
Because they used the ϟ rune twice. When used like that, it only has one meaning.
It’s our meme now, comrade!


The graphs are about the first 100/100/30 days of the conflicts, respectively.


It only becomes an image to me when outside of a code/preformatted block. Inside of one, it contains the raw markdown verbatim: <code class="hljs">!<span class="hljs-selector-attr">[alt]</span>(url)</code>.


I think that it’s the backend that screws the “url” up. Everything looks good in the preview, but the “url” part disappears upon publishing.


Looks like it’s using markdown-it, a Rust port of a JavaScript library with the same name.
It looks unmaintained. Last commit is from 2 years ago and issues look inactive. (including one asking asking about the maintenance status)


But it shouldn’t do that when enclosed in a code/preformatted block?


Nice alt text, very concise!


The syntax for images in markdown is
.
Edit: Feels ridiculous to have to use a real image for this. Lemmy really seems to dislike image-like formatting in code blocks.


A hall of fame I kind of want to be in. Perhaps I should take up posting.
P.S. I noticed that your image is missing alt text. Something like “Long list of users who allegedly harass Rimu” would probably fit.
Theoretically you could just strap
microphoneslasers to all themajor sealifesharks.
I’m not sure what the correct terms are, so I’ll refer to in-app/in-client notifications as internal notifications and mobile-style out-of-app notifications as external notifications.
Based on what people usually refer to with the word “notification” in the context of social applications and messaging services, and your comment, I’m assuming you’re talking about external notifications. If you mean all notifications in general, I’ve misunderstood your point and can ignore the rest of this comment. I do think that internal notifications are useful.
I’m not saying that external notifications are useless, but rather that I don’t feel that they’re as important as you seem to make it out to be.
Also, even if your Lemmy client doesn’t support external notifications, Lemmy supports RSS, which you can subscribe to with a different application.
It should probably facilitate discussions then
Discussions do not have to be between only two people, others can continue where someone else left off.
People often need to continue conversations to clarify information & elaborate…
This is true, but it doesn’t require notifications outside of the client. For example, I noticed your reply as Lemmy’s web UI showed that I had an unread message.
I don’t mind continuing a discussion over multiple days, though I’m not sure if this applies to everyone.
Shades of Mastodon users justifying suicidal design choices that were later rolled back here.
Could you elaborate? I don’t use Mastodon, as I don’t see the value in “micro-blogging” and prefer to follow topics rather than people.
As for the rest of your comment, I too disagree with blocking VPNs & Tor to fix their CSAM problem, but I don’t see how that is relevant to this discussion? Though I do not mind if you want to discuss that instead.
I’d say that it looks pretty detailed to be called SimpleX, perhaps a better name could be something like CompleX?