Typewar

joined 1 week ago
[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 day ago

Me and my friend used netcat to transfer 30 GB of files put into a zip. Very fun, would not recommend

2
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

It seems like Lemmy took off 2 years ago with the announcement of Reddit's API blocking 3rd party apps. Many instances popped up, and some disappeared equally fast. More people have now moved over since the actual announcement becoming alive.

I'm a bit new to the decentralized hosts with federation/mesh social networks on the web, and are wondering if anyone with long time experience using something like Mastodon would shine a perspective on how these services usually operate? Does popular instances suddenly disappear, resulting in people losing contact with each other? losing progress, reputation, communities and their history? Since it's open source, and it's meant to be run by the people, for the people. How is the stability and long-term plan for Infosec.pub? I would like to stick around this service for hopefully many years.

Most of the instances in the instance section (https://infosec.pub/instances) is gone. I would be interested to see the statistics on how long all these instances lived before they were shut down, and compare those numbers to the big instances people are signing up to.

Lastly, there seems to be no way to migrate your account to another instance [1], so long-term reliability is indeed important.

 

By Priquetrum Pixiv/X, Source: Pixiv/X

 

By Watersnake Pixiv/X, Source: Pixiv/X

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago

I knew a person who would get hardware from his job for free.. he was doing 800 kH/s yet still took him weeks sometimes to find a block.

I've been a member of a small pool with around 300 kH/s total mining power, and I know how it feels to find 4 blocks after each other with 300 - 500% effort. It's randomness doing its thing

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago (3 children)

The small niche communities are the ones I'll probably never see again, like /r/reverseanimalrescue /r/TheNightFeeling /r/darknetplan

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

First comment here, doesn't look like my third party app is working anymore. I really liked it compared to the default Reddit app