The cloudflare protection of their main instance is breaking federation right now, which is a bit annoying. I hope this will be resolved soon.
daan
Specifically for lemmy: https://browse.feddit.de/, to find more smaller communities you like and help them grow.
Jellyfin is free/open source software, while Plex is not.
Trackmania Turbo has never really had an active online community. The new Trackmania game called "Trackmania" is the most popular one, but you need to pay €10 each year to access most features.
Why the hate against lemmygrad? Just let them have their opinion. Have they done anything wrong to you personally? No? Then let them be. At least this is how I like to think about it.
Also, are we really going to start witch hunts for instances that federate with an instance that you don't like?
I don't think his political views are relevant in the first place. As long as he's a great developer and nice to work with, there is no problem for Lemmy and its users.
People really need to stop doing this thing where they disagree with something someone says just to discredit everything else that person does.
I see, that makes sense. Thanks for the information.
I always mix up pleonasm and tautology. I'm still not sure what the difference is, actually.
I was already able to deploy it on my Raspberry PI 4 without any issues. It was using a lot of CPU when joining large rooms, but now it seems to have calmed down and it's using 1-2% CPU, which is very reasonable. In comparison, home assistant runs at around 2-3% idle, and lemmy fluctuates between 4% and 10%.
Thanks for bringing this up, this is great! It's also written in Rust, and I love Rust, so I might contribute this summer. I'll add it to my list of potential project to contribute to, along with Lemmy.
Updates can't really break anything, and if something would go wrong, I can simply boot on the previous image, which will still be there. They can also happen in the background, such that I don't even know it's updating. It just happens and never bothers me.
What's even more interesting is that you can rebase on another base image without having to worry. If I don't like it, I can just go back to the previous image. With ublue, you can even customize your own OS image.
I believe modern Android uses a similar concept. They use two partitions, and install an update to the other image while your phone is running normally. Then all you need to do is reboot, and you'll be on the new boot image.
Factorio