This. If you’re unhappy with the shitposts, block /c/[email protected] and like magic, they’re gone.
This. If you’re unhappy with the shitposts, block /c/[email protected] and like magic, they’re gone.
It was fully charged ten minutes ago, when the official Reddit app started opening.
During the official app beta, every beta tester complained about every problem they still have- poor battery life, shitty performance, unintuitive and space-inefficient UI, excessive ad placement. Reddit made exactly zero changes as a result of this feedback.
Ah, the Activision Blizzard playbook.
I mean, it’s basically a theme pack on top of Kubuntu, so it’s not wrong.
Hannah Montana Linux
Stadia really needed to be a monthly subscription model rather than asking people to buy games on Stadia.
Nobody wanted to buy in to a Google platform, but I might’ve signed up for a month and had a look.
Federation is glitchy right now, there’s fixes coming in Lemmy 0.18.1
Okay, but for now all the “RIP Reddit” posts give migrating Reddit users a feeling of, “So this is where the other people like me went.”
There’s an issue with unreliable federation making posts, comments, votes, subscriptions, etc sometimes not work properly that’s being fixed in Lemmy 0.18.1.
I’m on mobile and I’m too lazy to find the bug report to link
“Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others.”
He wasn’t optimistic on being able to make that work, last I heard.
He was initially talking about $3/month, but the issue is that most of the people willing to pay a monthly subscription for Reddit are the heaviest users. So instead of looking at the API usage for the average user, pricing needs to be aimed at the top 10% or 1% of users.
I’m still looking into it, gathering data etc. Unfortunately the average call rates when broken down to the top 2, 5, 10% etc of users is painting a much different picture. This is the cohort of users I would expect to possibly convert to a subscription model and the average rates for those users can be 3,4,5 even 600 hundred calls per day just by the shear amount they use the app. Some of the top users are well over 1000 per day and sometimes over 2000.
So I’m not sure yet. It would probably have to be a usage based subscription model if it was going to be anything and I’m not sure that’s worth doing. I am still looking into it but unfortunately I don’t think my earlier price points will work.
The feeling of “You’ve clearly indicated you don’t want this, but this is how long we’re willing to wait before we try to force it on you again” of the 30 days is annoying, yes.
uBlock Origin doesn’t have a 30 day limit:
www.youtube.com###title-text:has-text(Shorts):nth-ancestor(7)
I’ve had to add something like #infinite_scroll_content > div:nth-of-type(1):others()
for a few sites in uBlock Origin because every site wants you to just scroll the site forever now and attaches a bunch of other random articles to the bottom of any page you open.
I also block a lot of sidebars, sticky title bars that follow you as you scroll, widgets prompting me to chat with a salesweasel and so, so many cookie notice bars because sites still think they’re a get out of jail free card by EU law.
I’ve actually got quite a few Youtube lines in my filters file, because it’s my computer and it still does what I want despite the best efforts of big tech companies:
www.youtube.com##.yt-formatted-string.style-scope.yt-simple-endpoint:has-text(YouTube Music):nth-ancestor(13)
www.youtube.com###video-title-link:has-text(Mix – ):nth-ancestor(7)
www.youtube.com###title-text:has-text(Shorts):nth-ancestor(7)
Do you think they’d lower prices if theft stopped?
Why don’t titles sponsored by one company also do extra work for free to support a different company’s competing proprietary technology?
Gee, I wonder.
Article doesn’t say a single word about NVIDIA titles that don’t support FSR, either.
Me too.
I originally intended to do a pcie passthrough setup with a second video card and use a Windows VM for gaming, but then DXVK hit and it just wasn’t necessary. The Windows games I cared about worked under Linux so I never got around to it.
IIRC the two hardest problems in computer science are cache invalidation, naming things, and off by one errors.
Even scanning over the network works on Linux on my Brother MFP. I really didn’t expect that.