

This is exactly how it’s meant to be used. People who think it’s to be used for more than what you’ve described are not serious people.
This is exactly how it’s meant to be used. People who think it’s to be used for more than what you’ve described are not serious people.
Very cool, thanks for your response!
For some reason I assumed this was already how the fediverse worked, but I haven’t been here very long and it does explain some things, including the “empty” vibe in some lesser-populated places.
This is super exciting for the fediverse and, naturally, I have questions. While this change will mostly bring positives and a better experience for users, there could also be more opportunities for shenanigans.
What considerations are being given to data integrity/mutability and trust? Will all servers that touch a post have a distributed record of all comments and give network confirmation (a la blockchain)? Or does one server (e.g. the originator of each post, or the server with the most resources) act as a single authority of that post? Something else?
Could one server be instructed to “go rogue” and submit bad content to the network, or go on a deletion/overwriting spree that ends up becoming permanent?
What about resources? What impact will backfilling have on your average dude hosting a small instance?
This is just where my mind goes, you see. I’m sure all this and more have been discussed and figured out already. If a public discussion is available to look at, I would love a link!
Wow, you really managed to suck the fun out of it huh
I’m adding it to my KinkedIn
Ideally, they wouldn’t
I graduated in 2011, and same. My high school had a pretty janky mix of various Dell Inspiron towers, running mostly Windows XP but with a handful of Windows 2000 and ME machines that for some reason (prolly hardware too old) escaped their upgrades. We went through impressively comprehensive MS Office training and even Computer Tech classes (essentially an intro to an intro to computer science where we learned data concepts and built a PC).
A few years later, 90% of those machines had been scrapped, the mandatory courses were all gone and the kids all had cheap crappy Chromebooks. Now any tech courses are just electives and the students are expected to magically know how to use the software they’re required to use. (Because “they’re young, of course they know it!” Nevermind that they’ve only used iPads since birth).
Consequently, any class involving a computer, even if it’s just word processing for English essays and such, has the teacher taking time out of instruction to show the students how to use the stuff. Otherwise there are problems. It’s a sorry state of affairs and a lot more kids are getting left behind when it comes to tech. Google might be the worst thing happening to education now if it weren’t for the GOP.
I don’t believe you
/s
It makes me think of a machine, not a person. I prefer to just use “staff”
Great idea! That way you’ll know it hasn’t been tampered with because of the way it is.
There’s a thriving used market with significant discounts if you’re willing to go 1-2 models back from the latest ones.
A simple fixed menu wouldn’t even need AI to be automated, just buttons.
Yeah, I think we can tell you’ve never been depressed…
Maybe I’ll take a dashcam video. Seems like the sort of thing that belongs in dull men’s club.
Having a car that’s all one color and/or has all parts intact and securely fastened: also gay
My favorite blinker scenario locally is this really disgusting offramp/series of interchanges/spaghetti abomination thing on my way home from certain directions. I take every possible lane change and right turn for nearly 2 miles on this part of the route, so I just activate the blinker once and it stays on for a solid 3 minutes until it shuts off on its own.
There are now entire forums dedicated to pirating the turn signal
Beelzebub will give you the 2fa code, but it’s always just after it expires