I read an article comparing Reddit to a dying mall and honestly it's kinda getting that vibe since the protest
The migration is not gonna happen overnight, but it is happening.
I read an article comparing Reddit to a dying mall and honestly it's kinda getting that vibe since the protest
The migration is not gonna happen overnight, but it is happening.
I've found that a hybrid between print and cursive works best for me in most cases. That said, it becomes "cursive" if I wanna go faster, which also makes my writing progressively illegible lol
The music really added to the experience. Control is a really great, original game. I'm excited for the sequel!
... and watch it become not-satire and then fully serious
It's gonna need some careful moderation to keep it fully satire methinks
At this point they're just gerrymandering the pizza
This is helpful, thanks!
(commenting so I can also bookmark it in a way, there is still no save feature)
Yeah, I don't see an option for installing it in any mobile browser I've tried on Android, and IMO a PWA on desktop seems a bit redundant
Like @psyspoop said, touchpads can be prone to accidental collapses. Maybe setting the touch target to be on the "header" of the comment (the whitespace between the username and the upvote/downvote buttons) could be a good compromise?
Thanks for the reassurance, but please take rests too! If there was a way to donate then please feel free to post it somewhere, I can see a lot of potential here.
you realize that some instances ARE problematic even if you have access to the entire federated content from it.
Personally I needed reassurance that an instance at least appears to be committed into fighting hate speech, especially as a gay guy
and Kbin presents a front that feels easier to grasp when you're not familiar with the concept of the Fediverse
As a similarly sorta-but-not-super-techie guy, I agree. Kbin nailed the presentation of the Fediverse by introducing a UI and experience that is remarkably similar to Reddit. For that reason alone I hope Kbin comes out as the most successful (or at least viable) alternative.
I frequently lurk on r/worldbuilding and it is still pretty active, though I've yet to find a solid equivalent of that sub on kbin/lemmy