peterg75

joined 1 year ago
[–] peterg75@discuss.online 2 points 1 year ago

From what I see Hexbear is pretty toxic and gets regularly defederated anyway.

[–] peterg75@discuss.online 1 points 1 year ago

No other way, if you're banned.

[–] peterg75@discuss.online 3 points 1 year ago

I got an off-lease dell latitude 7400. Tbh, got it for free, but you can snag one on eBay for under $400. i5, 16 Gb ram, got a 1TB drive for $50 on Amazon. Runs Linux very well! I'd go with a light weight is like EndeavourOS or Arch.

[–] peterg75@discuss.online 7 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Crate an account on a different instance? And oh yeah, stop being a dink?

[–] peterg75@discuss.online 1 points 1 year ago

Do a search in All for the keywords for the community name. Chances are you are either not going to find some of them or find multiple ones on several Lemmy instances. If you find several, subscribe to all and see which one is the most active, if you find none, consider starting one yourself.

[–] peterg75@discuss.online 2 points 1 year ago

EndeavourOS for the win! The speed of Arch Linux without the installation pain! Especially for older hardware?

[–] peterg75@discuss.online 5 points 1 year ago

My rule of thumb is this: if I perceive that the IP I want, was created by an individual who must have spent their blood sweat and tears creating it, I'll pay for it to encourage that work. If, on the other hand I'm being made to pay extra for something just because there's a queue of corporations that just want to profit for providing something made by others, I pirate it as a form of protest. As an example, I'll gladly pay for an ebook being distributed through an author's website even if I'm not sure I'm going to like it. But I will not pay for a cable subscription just to be able to watch sports programs. Another example: I've paid money for mobile games when I see a lot of effort being spent in making the gameplay engaging, but I will delete or try to cheat or pirate games that I perceive as pay-to-win.

[–] peterg75@discuss.online 1 points 1 year ago

A fair point. I deleted my account to reduce the statistics of active users of Reddit. On the one hand, I agree that the information that exists there is still relevant and can be helpful for some people, on the other, I don't want my account to count for some stat that Spez will use to report to investors on the continued viability of Reddit.

[–] peterg75@discuss.online 6 points 1 year ago

While I agree that getting bullied in the news cycle is not healthy, I feel like getting the information about what's going on around you from memes is also not good. It lacks context and details to enable the user from processing the news with critical thinking. I don't know what the answer is, but for people who exercise their power of a vote, I feel like they need to be as knowledgeable about the issues as possible.

[–] peterg75@discuss.online 10 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I dropped and deleted the account. Only time I go to Reddit now is if I am searching for something and a Reddit link is part of the search and happen to have the answer I need.

[–] peterg75@discuss.online 7 points 1 year ago

Gimp, OpenOffice.org, VLC, Slackware, and on and on after that. Every flavor of Linux: RedHat, SuSe, Ubuntu, now on Manjaro and Endeavour.

[–] peterg75@discuss.online 7 points 1 year ago

Gnome online accounts are also in Cinnamon if you like a more traditional desktop paradigm. Using it now on Manjaro. Works well.

 

I have been using Lemmy for a while now and decided to "branch out" from Lemmy.world to another instance. I used lasim to migrate all of my subscriptions over to the new account on Discuss.online. What I was expecting is to have the default view which is Everything, sorted by Hot, be somewhat similar between instances, but it is completely different. Can someone explain this? Does every instance build its own statistics that are used for the "Hot" and "Active" sort?

 

Is there an easy way to migrate from one instance to another? I’d love to be able to move my subscriptions and profile settings at the very least.

view more: next ›