I think it happens whenever someone interacts with a post. So someone must’ve been browsing the community by top or something like that and upvoted or downvoted the post. This pushed it into active or hot.
Just a guess, though.
I think it happens whenever someone interacts with a post. So someone must’ve been browsing the community by top or something like that and upvoted or downvoted the post. This pushed it into active or hot.
Just a guess, though.
Makes one wonder how many use their Steam Deck and know it runs linux by default
This. I think I have 1.1k hours on steam and probably double that outside of it.
In a lemmy.world
You wouldn’t eat a piano
I’d actually suggest using Quad9 DNS.
Uh, what is this?
Speaking as someone who used Infinity for Reddit.
I like it. I’d like it even more if it one day accomplishes the goal of making every application on an Android phone look graphically consistent.
Eh, I think Lemmy has reached a critical mass of users to sustain itself in terms of content in the long term. Every misstep that Reddit takes will bring about more migrations, and the platform is on its way to form its own identity. It’s wait and see, at this point.
My main concern is complying to GDPR-like regulations, given that federation means that the content in each instance may be stored elsewhere in a more permanent way, compared to a centralised service like Reddit. This might threaten Lemmy and Kbin in the future, I think.