hamsda

joined 1 month ago
[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

vim was such an unimaginable improvement over nano for doing stuff on linux servers. Having an in-shell-editor search-and-replace function alone is worth everything you have to do to learn vim.

And after I was comfortable around vim because of all the "training" on servers, I just switched to vim fulltime. No more GUI editor for me!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago

My smartphone sleeps in a different room than I do, we're not THAT close. So I need to physically move to another room to stop the alarm in the morning.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago

Ah, yeah, "most users don't care" is true. Being the only IT guy in my social circle, I can verify this :D

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (3 children)

I've been interested in computers and IT generally for more than 2 decades by now, so I don't think my experience reflects the experience of a standard user.

It didn't take long for me to grasp the concept of the fediverse and federation in general and I really like that specific aspect of lemmy. Still, I think there should be an infographic like the this somewhere visible or mentioned and linked directly on join-lemmy.org for new users to understand. It's a very nicely summarized text with visualizations of what this actually means in practical terms. If you've been living your whole life in the "single-owner" Microsoft / Apple / Android circle, the terms "decentralized" and "federated" might seem like foreign concepts.

I found the linked infographic in the "welcome" thread for new users on lemmy.world.

I joined lemm.ee because it was the most active of all the servers, but in retrospect, I should've joined sh.itjust.works just for the name. FYI - the second most active lemmy server (when sorting by activity on join-lemmy.org) is lemmynsfw.com, so congrats to beating the horny people!

It's also interesting to see which communities you really subscribe to in a completely new network. On reddit I joined so many subreddits, sometimes just on a whim. And now, most of them don't even interest me anymore. A nice, fresh start, really is the perfect time to apply the lessons learned from past mistakes.

[EDIT]

I'm using the Voyager for Lemmy app on Android as that one is open source and on GitHub. And the progressive-web-app version can be self-hosted in a docker container.

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