They’re often too tight or too loose, and you have to reach behind closets so you can’t see the color to match, and you have to put them in at weird angles.
They’re often too tight or too loose, and you have to reach behind closets so you can’t see the color to match, and you have to put them in at weird angles.
Its harm potential is somewhere in between. To put it in perspective, alcohol is worse than heroin. And like alcohol addicts, your friends should be able to get a clean and safe source to reduce damage, and the help they need without any fear of persecution.
You can’t criminalize problems away. It evidently didn’t help your friends.
The new Lemmy 19 allows users to block instances so that’s not unreasonable for the largest instances. Gotta show new users that users have control.
The machines were to replace the slaves.
Distilling has been around since forever. It’s a legitimate technique that can give you a better model depending on your needs.
OpenAI does it too to improve its models.
Congrats, how many years are you sober?
It’s also a problem with algorithms. Big communities drown out smaller ones because the sorting only looks at absolute numbers. Change is underway though.
(They were not serious)
Why would a nonprofit org do that?
Liking cats and dogs are not mutually exclusive what’s everyone on about?
It changes only when you disable regional search.
We’ll be driving monster trucks in 2033
People who use ad blockers aren’t the type of people to click the ads. We’re doing a Google a service by improving conversion statistics.
Zuckerberg is just a man, not a technology
On Reddit I’ve found most of the billionaire news in tech subs is posted by only handful accounts, they also don’t post other interesting things, so you can just block them.
I’m hoping that’ll work on Lemmy as well.
On Lemmy you only see local communities by default. On Mastodon you see posts from instances that the admin linked. Idunno about kbin etc
You can block communities and users on Lemmy. You can’t block instances, but that wouldn’t make sense since you don’t see their content unless you go there or subscribe to a community. Maybe blanket blocking users from an instance would be useful.
I’m not confused. You can block people on Lemmy.
On Reddit I’ve found most of the news about the big social networks is posted by only handful accounts, they also don’t post other interesting things, so you can just block them.
I’m hoping that’ll work on Lemmy as well.
What held the Egyptians back?