AFAIK, it's an HDCP thing (DRM), not user agent.
CoderKat
While I understand Linux consumers are a tiny, tiny fraction of the market, it also admittedly feels a bit weird that Linux support can be so poor, considering that I bet every one of those is hosted on Linux and developed by a Linux-heavy set of developers. It's DRM bullshit that just makes things worse for legit users while not seeming to stop pirates anyway.
Anyone know well Plex handles Chromecast? I'm interested in trying it out, but basically only watch stuff on Chromecast with an Android phone as the "remote".
If we never had all this drama where reddit showed its true colours, I think I probably would have (as an alternative to the API being paid). It is fine by me that reddit has to pay the bills in some way.
But lol, holy shit has reddit been awful in the past few weeks. The way they went about with their changes has been completely disrespectful towards reddit users, third party devs, etc. I don't want to give them any money now. It's almost comical how dumb their actions were in that regard. This isn't the first or only thing I've disliked about reddit, but wow did it blow the others out of the water.
By comparison, I've already donated $20 to kbin, the instance I use. If reddit had treated its users nice, they could have had that money. I have no qualms about paying for my usage. But instead reddit makes me almost want to pay money to see them fail.
Lol, exactly what I was thinking. I can't imagine a Reddit admin posting something like this.
I don't agree. The biggest threads on the site can already have a couple pages worth of comments. So I think there's already value in being able to sort by top or top-like. Plus even if there's only one page of comments, it's desirable to see the best ones first (and you might not want to read them all).
It's a bug that has been fixed but probably not rolled out yet. https://codeberg.org/Kbin/kbin-core/issues/47
I haven't really noticed many issues with federation besides the known issues with notifications not always working (not sure if that's federation specific) and the fact that votes don't seem to sync identically. I was comparing a thread here vs its Lemmy host and noticed that while comments transferred in a few seconds, there's something wrong with the vote count. I don't remember the numbers, but it was something like +40 on kbin but +150 on Lemmy, which is a huge difference.
You already can mark entire subs as NSFW. I think the problem is that a bunch of folks created subs that weren't marked as such.
Though with federation, it's always hard to say just what features other people have. I only personally verified that kbin lets you mark subs as NSFW, but someone told me Lemmy does, too.
As an aside, I think the check boxes need more descriptive labels. I found the labels confusing. Especially for people coming from reddit who are likely to be confused by the terms "thread" vs "post" (since on Reddit, those are used to refer to the same thing).
Or stairs in buildings. I don't want my coworkers judging how out of shape I am.
It helps that he's a great person.
Plus, he's reacted to people using his image in unusual ways before. He has an absolutely hilarious episode where he responds to someone mass generating AI created art of him in love with a cabbage. He noted the AI did a poor job, presumably through lack of adequate training data, so he married a cabbage in camera to help provide said training data!