Every day I feel happier that I gave up on windows entirely.
TooL
Doesn't this still have the same vulnerability of the potential for a hostile takeover similar to tor? Also, is there any way to use i2p to bypass geoblocking? If not that's a major reason why I and many people use vpns.
Are any of you guys seeing an issue where the comments from a remote community do not match properly when viewing them from kbin, or directly from the source? I'm talking like.. massive differences in the number of comments.
I mean, they're not entirely wrong. The moderation/administration tools are just not developed yet. But that's what you get with beta services.
Look at this guy with his fancy efi bootloader..
kbin has been the best community so far that I've found. I plan to stick around here for awhile. I've also got an account on lemmy.ca that I was using mainly for the hockey community. Now that kbin is able to access the wider fediverse I am not sure how much longer I'll keep using that account.
I've got 2 kids, and the public transportation in my area is basically non existent. My choices are taking a bus that doesn't get me even remotely close to where I need to be... or... uber? A taxi?
There's just nothing else here.
Bro same. It's almost like FOMO. There's just so much content out there that I feel overwhelmed just trying to parse through what I'd actually want in an RSS feed and terrified i'm missing actual important stuff.
This feels like a poster made by someone who has an extremely poor grasp of the english language.
But if you are pulling all the data to your instance by subscribing, wouldn't this actually alleviate some of the load on the original instance? Obviously not as much as if you were hosting the content yourself, but still moreso than if you were directly interfacing with their instance?
Or am I completely wrong there. I don't have a firm grasp of how content stored/cached between instances.
Lol that's a big yikes. Glad I never managed to make an account over at beehaw.
Uhh... Am I taking crazy pills here? Linux absolutely has drive letters, just not in the same way windows does. But yea they are pretty well irrelevant for any Linux file explorer.