On mobile I long press open in new tab, on desktop I Ctrl click to open in new tab. I do the same when I read an article so I don't lose my place in the feed. It works for every site so you don't have to learn a special trick just for Lemmy.
drascus
It says on the wiki that they don't have pen support... however Wacom tablet should be doable because it has normal IO and works with regular desktop apps. I know that is not a "fix" but it's a doable workaround for artists I think.
gadgetbridge for android is amazing also itd for linux is great. I would say don't use lift to wake as it's a bit too sensitive IMO and drains your battery super fast. Know that some apps like the stop watch get interrupted by notifications so when using those apps I turn notifications off. Same for the timer app it has the some indication vibration as a notification so you should turn off notifications when using that app. Long press on the wallpaper to get options to change the color schemes and such. Such a cool feature I like to change my color schemes a few times a week. Don't forget to put the watch in sleep mode when you sleep otherwise it will be vibrating all night and the screen will keep turning on. Not required but I keep an eye on the github repo to see what issues are being reported and so that I know when new releases drop. Also when you first get the watch be sure to update to the latest release.
well it is better but by no means fixed. I still get heart rates of 0 or like 200 occasionally. Also battery life may be better but realistically I am getting about 3 - 5 days before I need to charge... better than some smart watches but I think it could still use some tuning.
I work in linux most of the time our documentation is much better than what is on MSDN I generally don't need to leave a CLI to look anything up. Also I work in cloud most of the time and the cloud documentation for most providers is really good. There was a time where things came with damn manuals remember that? In any case yeah documentation is a damn mess these days. I still say sources like reddit are not my first choice.
Okay as an IT professional I will just say Reddit should not be your first stop for information. You should have a really solid foundation of knowledge. I think everyone does use places like Reddit, or Stackoverflow for certain issues or to add context. However your first stop for technical exploration should be documentation and white papers. There is no way to know if any of that stuff posted to reddit or stack overflow is even right.
OMG Yes this is awesome!
somehow every kind of bank, business, and rich person can get tax breaks, and bail outs yet average middle class people can't get some help on their student loans.
I am pretty sure we either agree in full or mostly agree with each other.
But what if there is a significant number of people who are just awful humans, or don’t have a thought for learning, or are not being open or honest etc.
Yeah I agree at this point if people are being systematically terrible then they should get banned or if there is a whole instance of them that instance should be defederated. I say systematically because maybe someone just brought up a hot button issue or maybe they just had a bad day. Like if it's 90% posts are normal and then just now and then they have a rage post I don't think that makes them a terrible person. If for example out of a whole instance there is one or two slightly problematic communities but as a whole that instance is fine then it probably shouldn't be defederated.
I support the idea of engagement and discussion but let’s be honest there are people who aren’t interested in that. There are people who are racist. There are people who really do think you and I are going to hell and they are happy to know that. Sorry there is a reason I don’t associate with people like that in real life and I don’t want to on line either.
Right I get that but I think we already have a fix for that. We can already block people and block communities we don't like so we don't need to associate with people we don't like if we don't want to. However we also don't need to shut down their voice entirely if they are doing nothing else then posting horrible memes now and then. However that might not always be true some instance might want to focus on a certain type of advocacy like Open Source and so a meme community for racists might just make no sense for a instance like that.
It is not my mission to discuss this kind of thing with all those people. Trolls and awful humans sometimes do need to be ignored. Otherwise we cannot have interesting or productive conversations with anyone.
Yeah I think that makes total sense there is no need for anyone to do anything they don't want to do in their free time. I do just wonder for the people who are not terrible but maybe just fallen into an ideology or have been radicalized. Would banning them and pushing them into a corner of the internet with only other radicalized people make them ever figure out they are wrong? How are they going to realize that they are wrong unless they are allowed to participate in a wider discourse where someone can challenge them on their beliefs? Does banning and defederating actually the problem in the case of people we just disagree with or does it make the divides worse and more entrenched?
thanks for the suggestion the post has been updated.
I think you are making more of a political and philosophical argument than a technical one. The project for tor browser and associated technologies is a 501c3 nonprofit. It's technology is open source and can be independently reviewed by third parties. Control of the network and it's technology is distributed and is not controlled by any single government or entity. It's not a perfect solution but it's better in certain contexts than other options. It just depends on your use case but the torproject is not doing anything "wrong" they are not a shill for a particular government.
I don't know it was a pretty solid switch for me personally. I just sort of moved over here and liked it.