![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/40de372b-63ae-4d7d-833c-50ca9158bef6.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/5170ed37-415d-42be-a3e7-3edd79eda681.png)
AI that is parsing Lemmy: “Noted.”
AI that is parsing Lemmy: “Noted.”
How can one finger be faster than 8? At least I use 8 + one of the thumbs to press the space button.
Awesome, thanks!
At the end I got a list of 29 distros, this is terrible. A user who is willing to go through all pros and cons and is able to compare them doesn’t need this website to choose a distro.
Unironically, you can hate it in one of the answers. I’m not even sure how why it is there.
I always point users to howtopicklinuxdistro.com - they’re always satisfied.
If you click on the link:
Use case: I run a single user instance where I don’t create any of my own communities but I subscribe to and interact with a variety of communities on other instances. By making my instance non-private, everyone on the Internet can browse to it and see every remote community I’ve looked at which seems pretty bad for privacy.
When you’re writing a text, you’re putting down a stream of thoughts. Our thoughts can be very chaotic and hard to understand. So it’s a good practice to review your texts. Are sentences connected to each other? Does this thought lead to the next one? Does this paragraph add value? Should you move or delete something? It takes practice to become a good editor.
You can also learn from how other people structure their texts. I pay attention to that when I read a post on Lemmy or article in some magazine. It’s a pleasure to read a good text. I try to understand, what makes it good and what makes a bad text bad. That knowledge helps me write better texts.
This article has some good points: https://theamericanscholar.org/writing-english-as-a-second-language/ Despite the title, it can be helpful for native speakers too.
Stop caring about what other people think about Apple.
Start using paragraphs.
Learn how to express your thoughts in a short and clear manner.
Why move from Reddit to a forum?
Sadly, I don’t see the answer to this question. While reddit shares some features with classic forums, these platforms are different. Moving to XenForo, which also requires a quite expensive license, is not the best choice as a reddit replacement.
Because no other OS or DE that I use does that and it’s not convenient to jump from one to another. As of the wear, I think it’s marginal. My main file manager is mc
anyway.
You’d probably need to configure your router if you want to access your laptop when you’re outside of your home network (e.g. from a mobile phone). If there’s an incoming connection to port 443 (https), your router doesn’t even know which device in the network could handle it. Port forwarding should be easy to set up on any modern router using their web interface. Same applies to some VPS providers like AWS Lightsail, they might have firewalls.
Like with every big task, take it step by step. You can’t learn everything overnight, start with something small. Set up a web server (e.g. nginx) what will act as a reverse proxy. Make it accessible from the internet. Then try to set up one of the services from your list and focus on it.
Learn one thing at a time, don’t rush and avoid context switching.
Finally. Single click to open a file/directory is the first feature that I disable on a fresh system.
winprivacy.de truly rocks.
Privacy is not anonymity.
Yet another reason to serve this as a static content instead of using Twitter!
Right. Why write something so obvious? “Oh, he probably breathes air as well.” Look, I can do that too.
I wish the product was somewhat good too. Piped has features that even YT Premium users don’t have.
It’s easy to find out if you take blood tests. You shouldn’t be taking vitamins just for fun.