Arch, Void, Arch, Gentoo, Arch, Arch,…you’re all making me feel like a basic removed.
Arch, Void, Arch, Gentoo, Arch, Arch,…you’re all making me feel like a basic removed.
People who want near-perfect distribution of power often talk about the serverless model. It’s sounds like it might work for something like e-mail, but I don’t see how it’s possible for something like Lemmy. This comment it cached on every instance with one person who follows it.
Atm, keeping Lemmy going for a couple of days might require 50 Gigabytes and lots of bandwidth. If you put that on a mobile phone, it’ll be a 50 Gig app, which will drain all your data in minutes.
But I think chatboards work well with servers, so it doesn’t seem like a problem.
Nah - each service (Mastodon/ Pixelfed/ Kbin) requires its own app.
You can sign up to Mastodon, then follow the rest from there, but the experience won’t be complete (no downvotes, for example).
It’s all a little arbitrary. When you create a new service (like Lemmy, or Mastodon), you can have them link with anything, in any fashion you like. The defaults are mostly sensible.
For example, I’ve just made a mastodon post asking /r/casual a question. Once that synchronizes across, you’ll see the topic over there.
I’ve used ani-cli
a few months ago, and it worked then.
Why so many apps just for watching anime?
I don’t know why I keep hearing of security measures to stop someone sleuthing into bootloaders.
Am I the only person using Linux who isn’t James Bond?