cerevant

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago

The admins are asking what the threat is, and the only response so far has been “but they are evil”.

[–] [email protected] 29 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Aside from the “well duh” factor, and the fact that this wasn’t even a secret, The demo had to happen long before it was ready to ship because the FCC filings were slated to go public and they didn’t want the world to find out about the phone from that source.

This wasn’t the demo of a defective unit shipped to customers, it was the demo of incomplete software and hardware. The reception of the first iPhone was overwhelmingly positive. So much so that Google abandoned their plans for Android being a BlackBerry knockoff.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago

The whole thing boggles my mind. Keep in mind that a good number of “Pro” users are corporate types running PowerPoint and Excel but certainly wouldn’t stoop to using a consumer model.

[–] [email protected] 55 points 8 months ago (1 children)

In D&D this would pass a group stealth check because more than half of the group passed.

[–] [email protected] 16 points 8 months ago (9 children)

No one is leading or trailing, because no one has voted.

Polls are not even a little bit predictive this far out.

Polls contain no actionable data for voters unless they are looking days before the election and want to strategically vote in a race with more than 2 candidates.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago (2 children)

Sinkit for Reddit does the job on iPhones. It isn’t Apollo, but it makes the web interface usable.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago (1 children)

I’m not talking about interactions between instances, I’m talking about Google and Bing indexing Mastadon. That’s who we should be using for search.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 8 months ago

When the rest of Hasbro’s business is tanking, they need to exploit the one property that is still making money.

[–] [email protected] 23 points 8 months ago

Sigh. Time for another round of patents that all say the same thing, except instead of “…but using the internet” they will be “…but using AI”.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 8 months ago (4 children)

No, you are disappointed that Mastadon doesn’t have the same feature set as Twitter. The fact that you can search off instance at all is impressive. What you are asking for is like saying you should find GM cars in Ford’s search bar. Each instance is its own website. Search engines are designed to do what you want, and as Mastadon grows in popularity, it’s search results will become more prominent.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 8 months ago

If you can’t explain how the change makes the company more money, it isn’t enshitification.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 8 months ago

Shame on you for not laundering the money through a book deal!

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/11257344

Don't forget the 8:07 start time (even though I really like the 6 o'clock starts)

 

For those who avoid the nameless website: Maskim was spotted posed with his thumb between his first two fingers.

Book Spoilers - LoC:

Delana opened her mouth to say that she had never heard of any Halima Saranov, and a woman appeared in the doorway. Delana stared in spite of herself. The woman managed to be slender and lush at the same time, and wore a dark gray riding dress cut ridiculously low; long lustrous black hair framed a green-eyed face that probably made every man who glimpsed it gape. That was not why Delana stared, of course. The woman held her hands at her sides, but with thumbs thrust hard between the first two fingers. Delana had never expected to see that from any woman who did not wear the shawl, and this Halima Saranov could not even channel. She was close enough to be sure of that.

4
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Show spoilers abound - turn back now!

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/4645104

Hey all,

Over the past week or so, I’ve been fighting with the bots running on Lemmy.world. Their CloudFlare protections often threw up errors which caused the bots to choke and die during games. I have been trying to figure out how to work around these issues, though the errors weren’t particularly clear in pointing me toward what needed to be corrected.

This morning, I received a DM from a user (not an admin) letting me know that the bot account @philly_[email protected] had been banned for spamming the mod log. To be clear: there was definitely a bug in the bot - one I had already fixed but hadn’t pulled to the machine running the live bot. The bot got stuck trying to unsticky a post about every 30 seconds. Even though the issue was more annoying than damaging, banning the bot was the right call in this situation.

That being said, despite their policy requiring bots have contact info for their maintainers, no one at Lemmy.world has contacted me about this. I’m not really surprised about this - the lemmy.world admins are constantly fighting DDOS attacks, and dealing with rogue bots isn’t high on their priority list.

Another concern is that Lemmy.world is having ongoing federation issues with some instances, including Fanaticus.social, that has been going on for weeks. These instances have not been defederated, however some combination of Lemmy bugs and CloudFlare protection has effectively defederated them. I understand that they are working to address this, but again - this is not lemmy.world’s priority right now. They are working with the admin of fanaticus.social, but despite promises that they will fix it, things are still not resolved.

So, all of this has led me to the decision to stop running bots on Lemmy.world. This isn’t intended to be some kind of retaliation or protest, it just doesn’t make sense to continue. Lemmy.world has enough of its own problems to deal with, and I don’t want to contribute to their headaches. I personally am frustrated with their lack of availability, so I’m moving my primary login to lemma.ee so I can reliably access communities that don’t live on lemmy.world.

I am going to continue to run the Philly bots for Fanaticus.social. For those not familiar with it, it is a smaller instance focused on sports communities. The admin is the lead on the Lemmy port of Redball and I’ve been working with him since the start of this effort. Since it isn’t heavily loaded, that instance can survive bot hiccups here and there, and the admin can reach me quickly if there is a serious problem.

I’m open to running some bots on other instances, though I’m going to hold off on running the NFL bot on anything other than fanaticus until we’re confident that it is stable. I’ll also be avoiding running bots on “big” instances. I don’t think hosting communities on instances with a larger number of users is a good idea, particularly if that instance is already having performance or security issues. I’ll briefly state that I think that the fediverse should have large instances for users, small instances for communities. Without digging into that tangent, if you are interested in discussing it further, I’ve started putting some detailed thoughts about it together here.

Redball is open source, so anyone is free to run it on whatever instance they choose. I’ll encourage any questions or discussions about Redball on Lemmy be posted here in [email protected].

Thanks for understanding. And go Birds/Phils!

C

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/4645104

Hey all,

Over the past week or so, I’ve been fighting with the bots running on Lemmy.world. Their CloudFlare protections often threw up errors which caused the bots to choke and die during games. I have been trying to figure out how to work around these issues, though the errors weren’t particularly clear in pointing me toward what needed to be corrected.

This morning, I received a DM from a user (not an admin) letting me know that the bot account @philly_[email protected] had been banned for spamming the mod log. To be clear: there was definitely a bug in the bot - one I had already fixed but hadn’t pulled to the machine running the live bot. The bot got stuck trying to unsticky a post about every 30 seconds. Even though the issue was more annoying than damaging, banning the bot was the right call in this situation.

That being said, despite their policy requiring bots have contact info for their maintainers, no one at Lemmy.world has contacted me about this. I’m not really surprised about this - the lemmy.world admins are constantly fighting DDOS attacks, and dealing with rogue bots isn’t high on their priority list.

Another concern is that Lemmy.world is having ongoing federation issues with some instances, including Fanaticus.social, that has been going on for weeks. These instances have not been defederated, however some combination of Lemmy bugs and CloudFlare protection has effectively defederated them. I understand that they are working to address this, but again - this is not lemmy.world’s priority right now. They are working with the admin of fanaticus.social, but despite promises that they will fix it, things are still not resolved.

So, all of this has led me to the decision to stop running bots on Lemmy.world. This isn’t intended to be some kind of retaliation or protest, it just doesn’t make sense to continue. Lemmy.world has enough of its own problems to deal with, and I don’t want to contribute to their headaches. I personally am frustrated with their lack of availability, so I’m moving my primary login to lemma.ee so I can reliably access communities that don’t live on lemmy.world.

I am going to continue to run the Philly bots for Fanaticus.social. For those not familiar with it, it is a smaller instance focused on sports communities. The admin is the lead on the Lemmy port of Redball and I’ve been working with him since the start of this effort. Since it isn’t heavily loaded, that instance can survive bot hiccups here and there, and the admin can reach me quickly if there is a serious problem.

I’m open to running some bots on other instances, though I’m going to hold off on running the NFL bot on anything other than fanaticus until we’re confident that it is stable. I’ll also be avoiding running bots on “big” instances. I don’t think hosting communities on instances with a larger number of users is a good idea, particularly if that instance is already having performance or security issues. I’ll briefly state that I think that the fediverse should have large instances for users, small instances for communities. Without digging into that tangent, if you are interested in discussing it further, I’ve started putting some detailed thoughts about it together here.

Redball is open source, so anyone is free to run it on whatever instance they choose. I’ll encourage any questions or discussions about Redball on Lemmy be posted here in [email protected].

Thanks for understanding. And go Birds/Phils!

C

 

Hey all,

Over the past week or so, I’ve been fighting with the bots running on Lemmy.world. Their CloudFlare protections often threw up errors which caused the bots to choke and die during games. I have been trying to figure out how to work around these issues, though the errors weren’t particularly clear in pointing me toward what needed to be corrected.

This morning, I received a DM from a user (not an admin) letting me know that the bot account @philly_[email protected] had been banned for spamming the mod log. To be clear: there was definitely a bug in the bot - one I had already fixed but hadn’t pulled to the machine running the live bot. The bot got stuck trying to unsticky a post about every 30 seconds. Even though the issue was more annoying than damaging, banning the bot was the right call in this situation.

That being said, despite their policy requiring bots have contact info for their maintainers, no one at Lemmy.world has contacted me about this. I’m not really surprised about this - the lemmy.world admins are constantly fighting DDOS attacks, and dealing with rogue bots isn’t high on their priority list.

Another concern is that Lemmy.world is having ongoing federation issues with some instances, including Fanaticus.social, that has been going on for weeks. These instances have not been defederated, however some combination of Lemmy bugs and CloudFlare protection has effectively defederated them. I understand that they are working to address this, but again - this is not lemmy.world’s priority right now. They are working with the admin of fanaticus.social, but despite promises that they will fix it, things are still not resolved.

So, all of this has led me to the decision to stop running bots on Lemmy.world. This isn’t intended to be some kind of retaliation or protest, it just doesn’t make sense to continue. Lemmy.world has enough of its own problems to deal with, and I don’t want to contribute to their headaches. I personally am frustrated with their lack of availability, so I’m moving my primary login to lemma.ee so I can reliably access communities that don’t live on lemmy.world.

I am going to continue to run the Philly bots for Fanaticus.social. For those not familiar with it, it is a smaller instance focused on sports communities. The admin is the lead on the Lemmy port of Redball and I’ve been working with him since the start of this effort. Since it isn’t heavily loaded, that instance can survive bot hiccups here and there, and the admin can reach me quickly if there is a serious problem.

I’m open to running some bots on other instances, though I’m going to hold off on running the NFL bot on anything other than fanaticus until we’re confident that it is stable. I’ll also be avoiding running bots on “big” instances. I don’t think hosting communities on instances with a larger number of users is a good idea, particularly if that instance is already having performance or security issues. I’ll briefly state that I think that the fediverse should have large instances for users, small instances for communities. Without digging into that tangent, if you are interested in discussing it further, I’ve started putting some detailed thoughts about it together here.

Redball is open source, so anyone is free to run it on whatever instance they choose. I’ll encourage any questions or discussions about Redball on Lemmy be posted here in [email protected].

Thanks for understanding. And go Birds/Phils!

C

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