When they defederated from lemmy.world, the stated reason was the open registration policy. Their registration process is handled manually. I suspect that they operate a much tighter ship when it comes to moderation. This has it perks and problems.
Rednax
Deze orka heet waarschijnlijk Mark. Hij heeft duidelijk geen actieve herinneringen aan de gezonken jacht.
You do you man. But I personally don't like strictly religious people.
Along with a 24 hour clock. But that might fall outside the scope of this community.
You should check the difference with a higher resolution. It might not be the graphics, but the CPU/memory.
I love the show, but the ship always felt too clean, too perfect, and too large. Voyager and even the Defiant cause more feelings and memories than the Enterprise does for me. But I agree that the ship design is perfect for what TNG is.
Het probleem zit hem vaak niet in de post die duidelijk haat dragend zijn.
Ik ben bijboorbeeld heel erg benieuwd wat je van de comments op de volgende thread vindt: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/851021
George, who uses gmail ([email protected]) can send emails to onno, who uses outlook ([email protected]).
George sends the mail via gmail, which sends the mail to outlook, which sends it to onno.
This is only possible because gmail and outlook share the email protocol. They are "federated".
If a lemmy.world user submits a comment to a lemmy.ml thread, the user sends it to the lemmy.world server, who will pass it along to lemmy.ml, which will show the comment to lemmy.ml users.
In theory, this should keep everything in sync. In reality, mismatches in protocol implementation and differences in blocked users/instances, create different views on the same thread when viewed from lemmy.world and lemmy.ml
For example: lemmygrad.ml could be blocked/defederated by lemmy.world, while lemmy.ml is still federated to both. When viewing a thread from lemmy.ml, you can see content from both lemmy.world and lemmygrad.ml, while the views from lemmygrad.ml and lemmy.world lack each others content.
Love, and by extension the relationship that comes with it, trigger the same parts of the brain that addictions do. What you are experiencing sounds like the withdrawal symptoms of that addiction.
They will subside eventually.
The hard part is not replacing your addiction with another one. Or at least not with a bad one.
It also helps if everyone simply enjoys being friends. The game becomes a reason to block your agenda and spend time with friends.
People seem to equate reverse engineering with decompiling. Those are not the same.
To me, reverse engineering is attempting to answer Why a piece of code does something. While just reading code attempts to answer What the code does. You attempt to reconstruct the decisions that lead to the current behaviour of the software.
Even if you do have the source code, and can easily answer What the code does, you may still not know why.
For example: why did the Lemmy devs disable captchas in server version 0.18.0? It is easy to see in the code that they did, but if they left no documentation, it is hard to know why. And without knowing why, you cannot fix any problem they had with it. Unfortunately, most why-questions are a lot harder to answer than that one. Mostly because the Lemmy devs are decent at commucation.
I bet you made this comment just to receive more upvotes.