It’s an installable web app. Still in testing but you can try it out here 🙂 (access key is in the community sidebar if you need it)
I should have thought of this sooner dangit
!lemmynade@lemm.ee has it labeled as the “Spotlight” sort option
I found this on the web for, “no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no”
You might be interested in ntfy as an alternative. You can just make a simple HTTP request and then get a notification on your phone.
Pumpkin seeds, almonds, cashews, spinach, and black beans are among the best
Yeah it's rough. I'm having a hard time staying committed.
this is oddly convincing
We can’t force people to join, but we can emphasize the negatives of Reddit and the ways Lemmy solves those. Things like:
- Lemmy does not collect personal data and share it with third parties like Reddit does
- Lemmy does not violate your privacy with tracking or ads like Reddit does
- Lemmy’s code and algorithms can be viewed and reviewed by anyone at any time as-is, unlike Reddit
- Lemmy is 100% self-funded and moderated by its own users across the world. Reddit and your data is governed by a single money-driven corporation with controversial leadership
People that value those things are the ones that will consider moving over. You might say that you’ve read over Reddit’s terms and conditions, and then present the Lemmy community as a private and safe alternative if anyone wishes to join?
Thanks a ton!
For those that don’t know, @sunaurus@lemm.ee is a huge contributor to the Lemmy codebase and discussion on GitHub, probably aware of most problems before we are. Silence here likely means our admin is contributing to all of Lemmy or taking a much deserved break
Maybe you could preventDefault onclick on the anchor element that links to the form page? You could then use one of those replace functions in that onclick handler. It’ll still be valid HTML this way, functional without JS too