One page rules also has general soloplay rules so worst case you can alternate take turns on your side and go by the rules for ae "AI" opponent
Bardak
I've been thinkg of getting a refebushed 1 litre office PC and a couple external HDDs to build a basic starter NAS for cheap.
I've taken two data structures courses in School. My first one in C and a second one in Java. I was happy I took the C one first because in the Java course thrt used over engineered OOP. They used 6 different classes used to make a single binary tree!
Not an answer to your question but when you say " I find that it has battery issues trying to play anything fancy like Skyrim" do you mean that the battery drains while plugged in or that you are mainly playing while not plugged in and your battery life is really short.
If it is the former then you might just need to buy a higher wattage power adapter to sustain. The power draw.
I am missing the ability to see other subreddit/communities conversations on the same link.
How do we handle "dupe" communities?
I think the only really option is to let things play out. This was/is a problem on Reddit see r/gaming vs r/games. Overtime certain communities on certain instances will float to the top.
What's the best way to find new communities?
This still needs some work. It would be nice if you were able to search communities by instance or look just see the hot/active page of a different instance to help with discoverablility. These may be possible but I haven't found how to.
Now we just need to get rid of the image preview for really old farts like me. I also wouldn't mind a theme that gets rid of the inline images in comments and just replaces them with a link.
Seems like a good way to play around with multithreading, SIMD and even shaders if you wanted to.
There are two differing thoughts on federation I have seen.
That servers/instances are only a means to provide people access to the network. They should be not gate keep or restricted access to the entire network. In this case it's like email were you expect to be able to send anyone a message no matter who is their provider. In this case blocking instances is only to stop malicious and misbehaving instances.
As a way for seperate distinct communities converse with eachother. In this case if there is an instance that is detrimental to the culture of your instance you can block it from interacting with your instance.
While I appreciate the theory of the first idea in practice I believe second out come can't be stopped as people self sort into communities.