The first is infinitely re-watchable even with the terrible CGI, but the second one is unwatchable.
The first is infinitely re-watchable even with the terrible CGI, but the second one is unwatchable.
There’s a difference between linguistic simplicity and color blindness.
Is picking a server/federation too complicated?
Yes, but because 90% of the fediverse is older tech nerds, good luck getting them to acknowledge it.
undefined> The Library of Alexandria had many unique works of cultural and scientific importance. YouTube is full of mundane content, mostly entertainment.
Are you serious? The vast majority of culturally significant artifacts were, at the time of their creation, mundane and/or entertainment.
Why male models?
I’m more concerned with the fact that they’re removing features without reducing price or making up for it elsewhere. I have no desire to support that business when there are perfectly fine alternatives.
What I’ve seen others recommend, and I think would have helped, is the ability to ‘port’ to another instance. So it can just be “Go create an account at lemmy.ml. Don’t worry about the instance, we can always port later if you want”.
I know now it doesn’t really matter (and have accounts with all the big instances) but I agonized over what instance to join at the beginning because I didn’t KNOW it didn’t really matter.
The ‘port’ ability also seems like something that is just a good idea in general, so I believe that to be the best option (that I’ve seen).
undefined> I disagree that it was harder to sign up for.
You are correct, and I misspoke. By ‘harder to sign up for’ I was referring to not just the actual sign up process, but the steps involved before the actual sign-up process (deciding on an instance, which itself requires learning what ‘instance’ means, as well as at least some research into what federation is, and what the differences are between instances).
I blocked reddit the day they announced the API changes, so no problem there!
Fair enough.
What do you propose? Lemmy is significanly more difficult to understand, sign up for, and use, with far less content than Reddit. And the majority opinion seems to be ‘fuck those kids that don’t understand how to use lemmy, we don’t need them’.
Lemmy is something like .02% the size of reddit
User engagement is important, and karma is one way of driving that engagement. Pretending something’s not important from your high horse because you don’t understand it just makes you look like a spez.
The fuck is a tankie?
The problem is when 50+ communities all start talking about something pointless Trump or Elon said. I want to be able to hide/block posts by keyword, not community.
I mean, of all sites, polls make the most sense to require cookies to avoid duplicate votes.
Do you?