anyone can update the list and make a pull request https://github.com/LemmyNet/joinlemmy-site/blob/main/src/shared/components/app-definitions.ts#L459
They may as well just use phpbb at this point.
idk I think even with federation fully disabled, Lemmy is still better than phpbb
I think the holdup is that previously SMS was paid for through your carrier, so Google can let any app use it and no one loses money. Now the main RCS instance is hosted by Google, and I guess Google doesn't want other apps freeloading on their servers since you're not paying for RCS directly like you are paying your carrier. It really sucks and I hope it gets resolved soon, especially with Apple joining in. We also need a good open source RCS server and client.
And then a user copy-pastes all the content onto pastebin or something lol
I guess the more important part might be only allowing posts/comments/votes from actually approved users, this should be good enough for that purpose
Anything more than that just use a local-only private community
I don't think this feature exists yet, you should request it on their GitHub
the cross-post button is the correct way to do it, but sometimes I do delete the >
at the start of each line to remove the quote block
currently the "cross-posted to:" thing is based on the link URL, so text-posts don't have that for now, but any link post will get it automatically if you used the cross-post button
(easy solution is to have a url for every post, even if it's just a simple image)
And Reddit announced that NSFW results would not be returned by the API (which basically renders apps useless for many users)
And of course many subs use the NSFW flag for spoilers too, so you could really be missing out on a lot. On r/StarCraft they use the NSFW tag for recent tournament results, which is like the main thing I would want to discuss on there lol
my bug report was closed but I'm still seeing the issue on voyager.lemmy.ml even after it was updated to rc.5
https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy-ui/issues/2215#event-10991644637
maybe someone else here can confirm my findings?
@nutomic@lemmy.ml @dessalines@lemmy.ml
I don’t remember seeing any significant performance/grapical differences
CPUs weren't multicore back then, this wouldn't have been to improve performance really, they'd use "green threads" to conveniently run code with waits in it, and it sounds like they had a task queue of green threads
Mirror for that lemmy.world post since they're currently down...
you can probably find a mirror of the community on one of the big Lemmy instances