RadDevon

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Thanks for checking into it. I PMed you.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yep, I've been watching spam just in case. I have three emails there but nothing from VLemmy.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Yes. Just retried and it tells me my email exists. Email field is required.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Just checked spam. I have three emails there, but none are from VLemmy. I tried to register again in case I mis-typed the email, and it tells me the email exists. 🤔

 

Hey there. My current home instance's performance is awful, so I tried last night to create an account on VLemmy. I saw the toast saying I would get an address verification email, but that email never came through. Is this a bug, or does that email maybe not actually send until my application has been approved?

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

Here are the apps I used that I'm not seeing.

  • FoodNoms for calorie counting
  • Waking Up for guided meditation
  • Finch for gamified general mental health
  • Future for asynchronous virtual training
  • Tripsy for travel tracking
  • Organic Maps for offline mapping
  • Transit for navigating most US cities via public transit
  • Fastmail for personal email (Apple Mail for work email)
  • 1Password for password management
  • Elaho for browsing Gemini
  • Tidal for music
  • Vellum for cool backgrounds
  • SwiftScan for scanning documents
  • iPlum for a cheap business phone number
  • Kagi Search to set the Kagi search engine as the default in Safari
  • Parcel for package tracking
  • Mona for Mastodon

And I'll second some others.

  • Overcast
  • Bookplayer
  • Reeder
  • AnyList
  • Sleep Cycle
  • Signal
  • Obsidian
  • Vinegar
  • Noir
 

Recent change in life circumstances, and now I'm trying to figure out how to be an adult about food. I want to focus on eating healthy. I have very little foundational knowledge, so I need ELI5-level content. I'd love some online resources that I could use to learn. In-person classes are not a great fit. Anyone have any recommendations?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

All great points, and you're definitely right that it's not black and white.

[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I would like to make a distinction between a “content creator” in the literal sense — just a person who creates content — and a “content creator” as the phrase is commonly used today — a person who makes a living by selling content or by giving away content to market something else.

I, for one, would be very interested in seeing more people on the fediverse creating content, but I’m not super interested in the fediverse becoming a marketing channel for professional content creators.

Of course, it’s an open platform, so pro content creators are more than welcome to join. I’m just not super excited about approaching them and saying, “please come hock your wares to us on the fediverse!”

[–] [email protected] 12 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Illucia: the town of Final Fantasy. This was a Final Fantasy fan site, but themed as a town from a Final Fantasy. This isn't a town ripped out of a particular game though. Illucia was an entirely original town with original art created by fan Tatsushi Nakao.

Before the release of FF7, it was themed after a town from the 16-bit era of Final Fantasy. To navigate the town, the user was presented with a clickable server-side image map, where clicking on different buildings in the town would take the user to a page on the site that was thematically appropriate to the building.

Quick aside: a history lesson on image maps. Image maps were a technique that allowed for a single image to be linked to multiple different places based on where the user clicked it. In the later years of image maps, the web site developer ("webmaster" to use the period-appropriate nomenclature 😜) could define the different clickable areas in HTML and the browser would handle requesting the correct URL based on where the user clicked. This is a client-side image map. Before browsers had this capability though, browsers would instead send the clicked coordinates to a server-side script — often written in Perl, I think — which would translate the coordinates and send back the corresponding page.

Anyway, after the release of FF7, Illucia was reworked in that style. I believe in this iteration, the user would interact with it by using the arrow keys to walk an actual character avatar around the town and enter various buildings rather than clicking on a (relatively) simple image map.

Just like the FF series did, the site sorta lost its luster for me at that point. Final Fantasy had gone from an ensemble cast of quirky but warm characters and brightly colored pixel art to a blue and gray mess of blurry, pre-rendered environments and low-poly brooding characters that looked bad at the time and aged even worse. I pretty much stopped visiting, but I still fondly remember those old pixel art days of Illucia.

Sadly, I haven't been able to find any trace of it online anymore aside from one brief mention in another online article. If anyone knows of anything, please send it my way!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Sliced turkey, pear, and feta 🤌

 

If you're like me, you're accustomed to setting up 2FA by having 1Password detect a QR code on-screen, but this doesn't work with Lemmy's 2FA since it never displays a QR code. Here's what you should do instead.

Start in Lemmy by enabling 2FA in your settings. When you save, scroll down again to the bottom of your settings. You'll now see a 2FA installation button. My first inclination was to click this button, but my Mac wanted to open it in the macOS keychain instead of 1Password. Instead, right click the button and copy the link. (It's styled as a button, but it's really just a plain link.)

Now, in 1Password, add a one-time password field to your Lemmy login. Paste the URL you copied from the button into the one-time password field. Save the login, and you should now see the one-time password displayed in 1Password.

You're actually done at this point. One thing that threw me off is that Lemmy's 2FA does not require a code validation step like many 2FA systems do. I validated it manually by logging out and logging back in. Lemmy asked me to enter the 2FA code, and I was able to copy/paste it from 1Password to log back in.

Hope this helps others who are confused like I was!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Sounds like you're talking about Home Assistant maybe?

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago

Maybe for future astroturfing?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

I believe it's meant to make it easier to find the best posts. Anyone can post anything. The best things get upvoted. You can sort by votes to see the most popular posts first, or you can just look at a post's score to quickly see whether it's popular or not.

 

I've enjoyed the influx of new users over the past week or so. Hope things continue to stay awesome around here even with lots of new faces. So far, it's been pretty great! Thank you all!

 

This site has been around forever. It gained popularity for a while when the Google search algorithm had it ranking highly for a lot of terms. That went away for some unknown reason with an algorithm update, but the site is still plugging along, its users cranking out quality posts every single day.

 

I put together a list of onramps to the old web. Very excited to find this community so that maybe I can grow my list!

 

I've attempted to subscribe to a couple of communities on other instances. When I'm looking at the list of communities, those both say "Subscribe Pending." What is actually happening here? Is there a manual approval process? Some handshaking between instances?

The most confusing part is that some communities on other instances just subscribe instantly. These two didn't. 🤷‍♂️

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