Let’s destroy capitalism with bikes! (And ebikes for long distances)
- 0 Posts
- 30 Comments
fermuch@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.world•Bots are running rampant. How do we stop them from ruining Lemmy?English
2·2 years agoThat’s flux, isn’t it?
Yep, ded. So sad.
I blame capitalism
It is a lot of fun! Right now I’m back to arch, since I don’t have a lot of time, but funtoo does right those older decisions in gentoo which do not make sense in these day and age. And the updates are fast, really fast, since they use git!
The downside is the docs aren’t as good. Not even close. The wiki for gentoo is a great source of information.
Yes, and that is on purpose! It was always meant to be a joke on C++ :)
Gentoo isn’t cool anymore. You should switch to funtoo, so you can have fun too!
fermuch@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.world•US Court Rules Google a Monopoly in 'Biggest Antitrust Case of the 21st Century'.English
3·2 years agoI’ve been using kagi for a few months (6 according to my bank). It is paid. It is great. It’s so good I’ve switched my wife to it since Google was giving her a lot of garbage (she’s a non techie) and she says “it feels like Google used to be. The answers are what I was looking for. I forgot I was using Kagi”
Something like that already happened on Mastodon! Admins got together and marked instances as “bad”. They made a list. And after a few months, everything went back to normal. This kind of self organization is normal on the fediverse.
Votes were just a number on reddit too… There was no magic behind them, and as Spez showed us multiple times: even reddit modified counts to make some posts tell something different.
And remember: reddit used to have a horde of bots just to become popular.
Everything on the internet is or can be fake!
fermuch@lemmy.mlto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Probably should assume everything will be leaked, anyone using Tor/VPN for Fediverse apps?
4·3 years agoYeah, but now you’re moving trust from the instance into trusting masto.host…
fermuch@lemmy.mlto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Probably should assume everything will be leaked, anyone using Tor/VPN for Fediverse apps?English
3·3 years agoWould that be possible? How would other (normal network) instances federate with you?
fermuch@lemmy.mlto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Probably should assume everything will be leaked, anyone using Tor/VPN for Fediverse apps?English
6·3 years agoIf you don’t trust your admins, you can host your own instance. That way you’d control what is federated and with whom.
Buuut your server ip would be public, so idk…
Hello, I am a notification. Welcome.
fermuch@lemmy.mlto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•(Controversial) Should lemmy.world close registrations at a certain user count?English
9·3 years agoSome of the issues might be on the software side, so it’ll take some time until it can scale to more hardware resources. But yeah, I agree! What scares me more is the monetization path. Servers can become a really expensive.
fermuch@lemmy.mlto
Android@lemmy.ml•Got an old Android? Contribute its processing power to scientific & medical research ♥️
21·3 years agoIt was late yesterday and I didn’t realize I made it sound scary! Yes to all you said! The heatsink is a great idea, too.
I remember there were talks about merging the patches and making it an option when building. I don’t know the current status of that.
On real time operating systems, like freertos, not only the kernel is real time but everything else is too. Like: you can guarantee your call on the I2C and SPI won’t take more than 5ms, for example, even with hardware issues. The whole environment is built around the hardware realtime concept.
It is possible! But not so easy.
You need to build a “reputation” with other servers. If your server is online, then some instances lose messages or just plain fail to load your content. So, first off, you need to be online all the time.
And it takes a lot of bandwidth! Each message, like and post anyone makes on every instance might come from any other instance, so servers need to have enough bandwidth to talk to each other all day.
There’s also the problem of storage. You don’t only store your own content, but also a “cache” of other people’s content, so you don’t need to request it again every time.
There’s even a need for energy. Your server might connect to a lot of other servers, so you might need to have a beefy cpu to process all of that (so no running on batteries)
What you describe exists, actually. It’s called “peer to peer” (often called “p2p”). There are some p2p networks, like scutterbutt which runs on top of the “gossip” network.
They have their own problems, tho.
Federated networks, where you join a server and servers can talk to each other (instead of directly running on the users device) are a middle ground.
On a server only network, like reddit, means everything is controlled by one entity (reddit).
With a p2p network, you have the problems I’ve described before (and lots more)
And finally, a federated network like lemmy exists in between. You join a server, but are not limited to that server. If you don’t like something in your server, you can join some other server or even mount your own, and still be part of the bigger network. With the rules you desire to follow!






I’m not sure reality is like you imagine… Blogs were full of ads back in the day. Templates for blogs even had huge areas for ads.
If you want a good search engine try Kagi. I’ve been using it for a long time and cannot go back to anything else, since the results are so good.
And if you want something more curated (old school sites where content is the primary focus) Kagi has Small Web (kagi.com/smallweb). It’s like good old days StumbleUpon.