There are likely more communities available on an instance that kbin does not know about. I think that list is limited to what kbin has indexed and cached based on user activity. The downside to such a list is that a user may think it is exhaustive.
There are likely more communities available on an instance that kbin does not know about. I think that list is limited to what kbin has indexed and cached based on user activity. The downside to such a list is that a user may think it is exhaustive.
My suspicion is kbin is not actually listing every possible community either, just the ones it knows about through the same sort of indexing, where Lemmy does not have an interface to view all of the known communities by instance. This hampers discovery a bit, but also avoids confusion as there may be additional communities available that don’t show up in that list if someone else on your instance hasn’t subscribed to it.
Kbin is heavily centralized right now, so the main instance does know about a ton of stuff.
For a while vendors tried to lock down the BIOS pretty hard. Dell might still, I remember having to call and get assistance when a password was forgotten and they had to generate a backdoor key of some sort. Maybe that is less of a thing now that Bitlocker is widely used on corporate laptops and it is sensitive to tampering.
I don’t think I’m the only person who won’t reply to an email until there is something actually productive to say.
In the past they had jumpers for the same purpose.
What fediverse services are set up that way? For most projects, the flagship instance is by far the largest. For Mastodon it is something like 900k difference between the next most popular instance.
That’s why the government makes sure they can garnish you wages and even social security.
It’s unfortunate if the sh.itjust.works folks aren’t speaking, their listed rules seem pretty reasonable and the problem users appear to be breaking the rules of that instance too.
Communities have moderators too.
kbin paused federation while they dealt with the server/network issues, but was federated before that. kbin is actually larger than lemmy.world.
Who is “they”? The users, or the communities? Beehaw creates the communities, that’s why there are relatively few, so I don’t see that Beehaw communities would have much reason to move anyway.
Yeah I think it is. If you go to settings you can change the default (under “Type”).
Not really. Usually you have to request the community vs creating it yourself. Allows the admins to curate.
There’s a good chance your account was activated. I don’t think notifications were going out for a bit.
One would hope! I can find results from lemmy instances on Google - they are definitely crawling them, but their page rank is going to start out very low.
This has to be the first time I’ve seen someone praising reddit search, as opposed to a search engine.
Try changing the type to what you’re looking for. By default it will show all. Otherwise I’m not too sure what the issue is, if I search “brining up Reddit” this post is the result.
That’s kind of the point. Reddit still benefits from that content.
It needs to affect revenue. To do that it needs to last.
Multiple. Locally I have Timeshift doing btrfs snapshots every so often. This is mostly to roll back to a snapshot if something breaks. I’ve never had to use it (and probably should).
I use Pika backup every once in a while for a local backup to an external drive. Mostly because it’s easy to restore quickly.
I have duplicacy doing backups to a cloud provider. I used to use duplicati for this, and it was fine - although I didn’t like that it seems to be forever in beta. I like that duplicacy can do deduplication between backups of different machines which most other solutions I’ve seen cannot. I like its selection of cloud providers vs Borg/Vorta and some others.
It’s either this or we go outside, but the sun is out there. And people.