Lemmy is an improvement on Reddit, but imo not by much. There really is no innovation on the fundamental concept of subreddits/communities. The issue with Lemmy is that I've come across so many promising communities that quickly die off after the initial spurt of activity. I wonder if there is a better organic way to grow the "online discussion" from some form of general cespool, that can segementize only later when those needed segments (communities) emerge naturally.
You are supposed to ask stupid questions, but you actually can't, because there are no stupid questions.
3 and 7
I assume you can chain teleport and thus move pretty fast. Seeing that a container is empty can be useful I imagine.
Is it not customary to turn off the robot before inspecting it?
To that they will immediately answer - but do you want all your youtube habits to be in the hands of the government?
I honestly thought this is a post in some kind of jokes community.
How does it work? If there were a third party in the congrees, would the two biggest parties just be able to expel all members from that party from house since they can easily get 2/3 majority?
can scroll down to the comments while you have a video open in full screen
That was allready a thing for years now. I thought it was a feather they implemented.
No doubt number 5 is already happening.
Yeah. Another reason to keep it closed when not used.
In future corporations will sue farmers to force them to genetically modify their products, because they're "stealing the brand".
I don't post almost anything online. I mostly just comment. But even the comments I make I sometimes consume as content - I really like comming back and rereading them to enjoy how good and smart I've been.