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How are you guys accessing and interacting with this community?

I'm interested in knowing what you guys are using to access this community, whether or not it's via mobile phone or via laptop or desktop.

If accessing via a laptop or a desktop, what is your OS? Windows, MacOS, or Linux? And if Linux, what distro are you using?

If accessing via a mobile device, you can add in some details about the app you are using or if you're using it via a mobile browser.

Of course, you guys can add more details.


Just to provide a bit of a background behind the question: I've had this preconception that the ones here are among the more technologically-inclined (whatever that means), and thus, I'm curious about the make-up of devices and software used to access and interact with this community.


UPDATE:

As promised, here's a link to the compiled data (with some rudimentary stats). I will be adding more onto them this weekend (if more replies come in).

First of all, thank you to all who've responded. While my preconceptions haven't been shattered, I'm also pleasantly surprised to find out non-techies, refugees from Reddit, who have jumped in to the Threadiverse despite it all. I dunno if that's indicative of the dumpster fire that is Reddit right now, or the tenacity of those who've sought refuge here. Maybe both.

I will be expanding on my thoughts, and others, on a separate reply.

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  • I'm using Mozilla Firefox on both smartphone and Windows. I've been using Firefox since an on-and-off usage with Chrome in 2017. I knew Firefox's throne a looong time before Google took over the web.

    Tried Linux Mint, but my essential app (Fade In) fucked my writings' formatting and it's frustrating to edit +100-page works.

    • Okay lang yung Lemmy sa mobile Firefox? Was considering using it but I chickened out. Besides, I have a bunch of tabs permanently open in there anyways, lol!

      Too bad about Linux Mint. It has always had a special place in my heart for the distro that introduced me to Linux way back early 2000s' when our school replaced all our Windows machines with Linux ones.‌‌ Also, I am kinda sad about the poor state of Linux support among some apps/programs, kesyo 2% lang daw ang gumagamit ng Linux or whatever.

      • Linux Mint is fine for Windows replacement. It's just my essential app fucked by it, but everything else (playing CSGO, web browsing etc, media consumption) are fine.

        Lemmy on Firefox Mobile is more than fine. Kung ano ma-eencounter na "something" sa desktop, yun din maeencounter mo sa mobile browsers.

        • Ahh, that's too bad about the essential app.

          I see, I'm quite okay with Jerboa now, but I did consider using just Firefox Mobile. Glad to know I'd just be fine with it.

    • document editors on vim and emacs = 🗿

      • But dude, this ain't no coding. It's a screenwriting software.

        • Huh, here I am with the other odd solution: Latex, lol!

          Seriously though, I am guessing may special formatting considerations for that kind of thing, but I won't be surprised if someone out there have already made a plugin or an extension for that kind of a usecase.

          However, for professional work, I'd rather stick with the ones that are used by other professionals in the field (at least until feature parity).

        • haha you need to learn further

          • Do emac and other text editors can format screenplays? Know what my use cases first.

            • as far as I know neovim and emacs have extensions that extends their functionality by adding more features like templates, but even if there was none a some vim and emacs user will probably do it manually haha that's why I called them based

              • extensions

                Ahh, figures. With Fade In, I can just generate a screenplay template in seconds, write a plot, add characters and settings, and start "wondering." It's my most therapeutic and out-of-the-world session I have that I can "waste" my time before finishing a spec.

                • Woah are you writing a novel? Book guy pa naman ako

                  • Writing a novel is hard. My influences are films, man. I've been reading screenplays on r/screenwriting and took an inspiration to write one, and currently a ghostwriter. Novels and screenplays are two different juggernauts.

109 comments