This a great answer in a sea of slightly odd food choices. It’s healthy for kids to do this, apparently.
It’s nice here, but a bit under-federated. Other @Deebster
s are available.
This a great answer in a sea of slightly odd food choices. It’s healthy for kids to do this, apparently.
Those marine drones are five and a half metres long - so they’re like speedboats, not those little hovering ones or those enormous UAVs.
I assume it’s just a coincidental interaction. I mean, it’s not like yeast wants us to get drunk [citation needed].
TIL that Takara Tomy (the company that made the Transformers toys) designed the Transformable Lunar Robot LEV-2, aka Sora-Q (“sky sphere”):
I think part of the problem is that even when you’re subscribed to the small communities, it’s easy to miss the posts. Sorting by Scaled helps a little, but I still often find a post from days ago that I missed.
I’d like an option where you could “super subscribe” or something which makes those posts show up first, or even in the inbox.
No, it’ll be fine 99% of the time.
Nowadays, feature detection is done within browsers, and the differences between browsers are small enough that servers generally will serve the same version of a page to all.
I like this author’s attitude. I scoffed a bit when I read about “joy that can be found in mediocrity” but he’s right that you can (and should) just do something because you enjoy it or it’s good for you.
I’m not sure what you’re asking. Do you mean Lemmy communities, Lemmy instances, or something else?
If you’re on Windows, you can use Win
+ .
If you’re on Linux, try ctrl
+ shift
+ e
I’m surprised you say you don’t know what the 😭 face means, since it’s just exaggerated crying. Is it because they’re too small, or that you suspect there’s some implied agreement/subtext you’re not party to?
I can see why people wouldn’t know what something like 🍆 is used to represent, since it’s not for the intended (I assume…) use.
I’m another Kagi fan - after customising it a little it’s just so good, and I haven’t even played with features like lenses.
I really like the custom bang searches (e.g. I could make !ks gravity
search on simple Wikipedia), especially on mobile since Firefox Android doesn’t support the normal browser quicksearches (where you set a keyword for each search).
That’s interesting. The flaw with that logic seems to that there’ll always be new users, and they’ll be playing on hard mode since those vital clues have been removed.
Online it’s even more annoying (to me, anyway), because we have the time element specifically for this kind of thing and no-one bothers to use it.
After a glance at others’ answers, it’s the same thing: the trend away from skeuomorphism.
I always think about the time I discovered an Android area was horizontally scrollable - with no scrollbars to clue me in, it was only the fact that the icon I wanted wasn’t there that prompted me to discover the secret. I’m a software dev, if it’s unintuitive even to me, how do non-technical people stand a chance?
This is a neat little idea, although I’m surprised you found the motivation to finish what seems like a niche need. Was this something that you wanted for yourself?
It allows selecting multiple languages, but it’s not clear and setting multiple is fiddly - most sites use multiple checkboxes instead for this reason. Anyway, if you select Undetermined, English and whatever else you’re happy to see, you’ll see a lot more comments (and posts, probably).
Edit: to select multiple, hold control while clicking/spacebarring to add another.
It should have two language settings - those you might post in (for the dropdown on making a comment/post) and for those you’re happy to read (I’d just set it to all, since I can always translate anything that looks interesting).
As noted, this is an old article. You can install the plugin here: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/addon/firefox-translations/
I just tried it on https://www.tagesschau.de/wirtschaft/technologie and it’s definitely good enough to be usable, although it has translated the top story as “What the new data glasses from Apple can”. Google Translate’s version is almost the same for most of it, although it gets “can do” right.
It initially recognised that it could translate feddit.de but seems to have stopped now. Hmm.
Anyway, even though German->English is a pretty easy test given that English is a Germanic language, I’m happy to leave it installed and test it in the wild.
In Deep Space 9, Jake Sisko (the station commander’s son) is a journalist for the Federation News Service. There’s a good episode where he ends up in a war zone and the story covers cowardice and PTSD.