

Check your local libraries, or search for maker spaces
For example
I waddled onto the beach and stole found a computer to use.
🍁⚕️ 💽
Note: I’m moderating a handful of communities in more of a caretaker role. If you want to take one on, send me a message and I’ll share more info :)
Check your local libraries, or search for maker spaces
For example
Organic Maps was on iOS, my guess is that it’ll take time to get a new app approved on the iOS store
https://lexiglobe.com/olive-in-different-languages/
It seems that there are a few common types of sounds
Then some unique ones that still might fit into those bins:
Marathi is listed as “Jai-fa-la”, which is still somewhat similar to the second type
someone commented Gan-lan, which seems to be different
I don’t think they need a specific answer, but rather they want to comment on the different variations
Since the PieFed API was only enabled recently, there aren’t that many apps out yet. !interstellar@kbin.earth is the one that people recommend right now. Voyager has plans to add it.
As more people use it, hopefully more apps will support it :)
Someone else already gave a decent explanation :)
Can you try these two guide pages and see if they help? They have some diagrams
https://fedecan.ca/en/guide/get-started
https://fedecan.ca/en/guide/lemmy/for-users/detailed-overview
So lemmy.ca and piefed.ca have different feeds altogether when I view them, are they two separate things then
They are two separate platforms, made by different teams. The feeds look different for a few reasons
I’m not really clear on how communicating freely between them works
Unlike Lemmy and Mastodon, which are somewhat different formats (posts in communities) vs. short text posts on a user’s profile), Lemmy and PieFed are more or less the same. So it should be a lot closer in experience. Whatever you can subscribe to, comment on, or vote on within lemmy.ca, you should be able to do the same on piefed.ca
Especially because we are running both instances, and so they will have similar block lists.
It’s nice timing! Looking forward to seeing you and your instance in the world of pie :)
I commented this in the other thread, sharing it here as well
I’ve been waiting for this feature for a while actually 😅
When I last saw people talking about it, there were rumors that there would be a reasonable free backup (ex. up to 1 Gb) with relatively cheap paid options above that. I scrolled through the GitHub link and couldn’t confirm or deny if this is still/actually the case.
Backups are the #1 pain point for friends that tried to switch to Signal, especially for those on iOS. I have a local backup + sync setup for my own phone, but it’s a lot to expect for the average casual user to set up.
Whatsapp has backups to Google Drive, which is better than nothing but not ideal. It’s time Signal had a reliable backup method for casual users
A different calendar app might have something better
If you have a common pattern, you could create a custom calendar with that pattern. For example, if you always want 3 reminders for this schedule:
You can make a calendar with that preset, and then for any events that need that pattern, you set it to that calendar
That’s actually around -18°C (to -23°C)
So it is in line with everyone else
What did you make the chart with? It’s nice for something done on mobile
I believe Waymo has a better set of sensors (Lidar + Radar+ Cameras instead of just cameras), more processing power, and more research / time / resources spent on it compared to Tesla.
So it’s not that we aren’t ready for self driving taxis, and more about which cars are ready to provide that service
There are a few self hosted dead man’s switches which might work in this case.
Easiest might be to give passwords to a trusted friend with technical experience and a list of the important things that you want done.
It could be so that it works for embedded videos on other websites
A big part of this site’s pitch to its clients, including the “hyperscale” customers with gigantic data centers nearby, is that each device is labeled, tracked, and inventoried for its drives—both obvious and hidden—and is either securely wiped or destroyed. The process, commonly called ITAD, is used by larger businesses, especially when they upgrade fleets of servers or workers’ devices. ITAD providers ensure all the old gear is wiped clean, then resold, repurposed, recycled, or destroyed.
We haven’t hugged the Wii to death yet
Here is a list
https://selfh.st/apps/?tag=Bookmarks
Karakeep (formerly Hoarder) is another popular one, although I haven’t tried it yet
I saw this on another post earlier: https://www.theverge.com/tech/672312/microsoft-block-palestine-gaza-email
This was a UI bug a while back, and it might still be present in cases like account imports. Maybe someone can make a bug report / GitHub issue about it
There is no other method from what I can tell. Until it’s fixed, I guess someone can write a script that does the same action to quickly go through your list and fix it
https://selfh.st/apps/?tag=Inventory+Management
You could self host an inventory management software