

To give them their due (little as that may be), this only seems to prevent users from logging in to the mobile web interface, not from viewing content as a random user from Google.


To give them their due (little as that may be), this only seems to prevent users from logging in to the mobile web interface, not from viewing content as a random user from Google.


Asking the important questions! I won’t deny this has already crossed my mind. I do think lemmings sounds like the best option.


I quite like playing SSBU! I go to my locals whenever I get the chance, though I’m still going 0-2. I’ve dabbled in Guilty Gear Strive, and with the current zeitgeist around SF6 I’m considering giving that a go as well.
If anyone else is into Smash Bros games, check out !smashbros@lemmy.world! I just started it today.


I’ve had to change my mindset; if I care about it existing, then I have to be the one who makes it. I’ve already created !smashbros@lemmy.world and I’ve become a mod for !ukcasual@lemmy.world.


I saw this story going down on Reddit a few days ago but only just now learned that the original creator of r/BattleTech came back to boot out the bad mods, which is pretty cool.


I think the conventional way this is handled on Reddit is separating memes and fluff into one one community (subreddit) and more discussion based content into another community. It works on Reddit because even if the memes get more engagement in an absolute sense, each subreddit has it’s own yard stick for what is doing well, so a discussion that makes it to the front page of its own subreddit will make it through to the front page of users who are subscribed, alongside the memes. I don’t yet know enough about how Lemmy ranks posts to know if this will work, but hopefully it will.
Yeah exactly. It does have some features that require integration with the init system, which systemd obviously supports, but it could be used independently of systemd quite happily, and other init systems could easily support those integrations.