Jesus. Weigh the pro's and con's of course.
I was thinking more, start that business, or start that college course. Don't fucking jump off the Eiffel Tower in and bundle of blankets.
Does that really need to be said?
Trying.
I know it sounds cliché and... Well... Wanky, but it's true.
Trying and failing will always feel better than just giving up.
Like someone? Say something. They could humilate you and literally kick you in the balls and in 5 years i guarantee you'll regret it less than if you say nothing. (This is not an excuse to be creepy. If they say NO, then hear the NO. Shit happens. Move on.)
Have an idea for something cool? Try to make it reality. The sad truth is, honestly it's probably going to fail, but at least you will be able to say you tried.
And that 1 fucking time I'm wrong... My god, that 1 time. That's where the best that life has to offer exists. But first...
You have to try...
So ask yourself, really. What's the worst that could happen? ... Aaaand now ask yourself... What's the best that could happen?
Bought it early on, because I heard PC wasn't so bad. It was. Came back to it about 6 months ago and got through the main story.
It was better. The bugs were more in the Bethesda realm of funny, but not game breaking.
I'm in two minds as to whether to pick up PL. On one hand, I'm kinda done with Cyberpunk. It was fine. I'm not sure I need to go back...
On the other hand, apparently the expansion adds a lot to things like police AI, so it might actually be worth going back.
I dunno. Will see what reviews are like when it's out
Olive oil is actually delicious. Can't speak to using it for non-poopy reasons, but throw some in a bowl, add a splash of balsamic vinegar, sprinkle in some chunky rock salt, and dip the bougiest bread you can find in that shit! Delicious!
I'm willing to bet this is someone's actual password
As a kiwi...
Dear rich American assholes... Fuck off
Thanks
I'm far from any kind of authority on this, but I think you'll find the similarities in language (like ma mama mom mum mother mummy) come from the fact that very many languages today stem from the same root languages.
What I find far more interesting is where they diverge.
Ananas Anana Aнана́с Ananass Nanas Mananasi
... In English?
Pineapple...
Wtf!
Edit: I've just remembered reading that "mama" and "papa" come from the sounds that babies make naturally...
https://www.babbel.com/en/magazine/why-does-mother-sound-the-same-in-so-many-languages
I'm seeing clumps from the same community/magazine all grouped together when sorted by "active"
My best guess is that the data is transferred across instances in chunks and I'm seeing the content in those chunks! It's far from a deal breaker but there's definitely room for improvement!
Thanks, I think this might be why I can't find it. Will have another look in the morning
Instead each instance is responsible to create and enforce its own moderation policy. This means that two Lemmy instances can have rules that completely disagree or even contradict. This can lead to problems if they interact with each other, because by default federation is open to any instance that speaks the same protocol. To handle such cases, administrators can choose to block federation with specific instances. To be even safer, they can also choose to be federated only with instances that are allowed explicitly.
This is really what I'm not quite getting though. I understand (I think) how defederation works at a server (instance) level, but assume I call you a slur here.
The way that ☝️ is written implies that a moderator from each instance that federates with this one will need to moderate this comment separately... Which seems wasteful
Here meaning [email protected]? How do I sub or join or whatever it is I do now?
Damn! Seeing it happen to/r/mildlyinteresting is what made me eventually sign up here! This is just reiterating that decision.
I wonder how many other people are going to do the same thing I did
So if I understand correctly then, if a mod from here flags this comment as being in violation, and deletes it:
All other instances have to download that decision and delete the comment from their own servers? That seems like a looot of data transfer
How does moderation work?
Hello!
I'm part of the great reddit migration and I'm still trying to figure things out.
Something I've not seen much discussion about is how does moderation work in the fediverse?
Is it up to instance owners, or do communities have a moderation team like reddit?
How does that work across instances?