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First name that came to mind when I saw the thread title. His new Weird Stuff in a Can episode was a fun journey.
First name that came to mind when I saw the thread title. His new Weird Stuff in a Can episode was a fun journey.
Stefan Milo - Been really enjoying his videos “digging” into archaeology and pre-history.
A recent food discovery (Well within the last year) I made was Charlie Anderson highly recommend his series on creating NY style pizza.
To test it you can just put it into the browser console (F12), but adding it to an instance will require it to be added to a javascript file that’s loaded and run on page open.
It’s not the most ideal way of removing the feature, but it depends on what you’re needing your instance to do. If it’s just a personal instance, then I guess you could just run this line via a browser extension such as Greasemonkey, which would remove it in your client browser (not on the instance itself).
This will hide the button from display so it cannot be clicked on.
document.querySelector("[data-tippy-content='upload image']").style.display = "none";
How kind of it to think about your privacy. Such a nice google. /s
Us (humans) vs. Them (aliens)
Reddit’s army of pro-spez bots likes this.
Wait, I can redeem cash prizes?!?
duckduckgo.com offer that service too. Using a browser plug in it can generate @duck.com email addresses when signing up to sites and forward them to your standard email address.
Reddit is far too recognizable of a name to die. Myspace still exists today, as does Digg. It may have peaked and shifted from its original vibe, and will continue to shift, but with it it’ll still live on as the investors try to figure out ways to claw back their money.
I’m sure in ten years time you’ll be able to visit reddit.com and be fed some cleansed ad friendly news feeds snuggled between ads, pointing you to content funded by marketing money. Just go to Digg right now and you’ll see it.
This is like the discovery of the Rosetta stone.
Dunno about best, but I had a few instances where I posted a thread only for it to be deleted by a mod and then reposted by them. Gotta farma that karma. I maybe could have disputed it, but getting into a tussle over someones love for numbers that go up feels a bit pathetic.
Not really without a lot of work. The good thing is that there’s already Apollo inspired apps available. Mlem, and Memmy support iOS and they’re getting better by the day. I’d recommend checking them out and contributing feedback. You should soon have your Apollo style experience.
Can confirm I was looking for the right community to talk about this instance and when I saw posts about noodles I presumed this was not it (I actually didn’t read the sidebar). Would be good to enforce moderation a bit more on this space. Not that I don’t love noodles.
Reddit exists to make its investors money, that’s it’s only goal now. The userbase are a complication to deal with in order to appease the advertisers. It’s not the platform for users any more.
I’ve seen it talked about a few times across different platforms (Hackernews) where people have pondered the idea of cloning old posts, keeping the poster name but to a non-existent account. Acting as both a way to populate a community and archive content away from Reddit’s control.
I haven’t seen any examples of this done yet, not sure if anyone has.
I think it’s better for everyone if we can find a way where one entity can no longer own/control the contributions of a community and unpaid moderation.
What can Reddit possibly do now to ensure that it won’t act in a way that’s against the interests of the community? Reverse the API strategy? They already said this year that the API wasn’t changing, then they changed it. If I was an app maker there’s zero chance I’d trust anything they said now. It’s done.
Lemmy has some momentum now with the rush of new users. This will hopefully start to create some quality content. When the next wave of protests come, maybe after the 30th, hopefully those that come to seek a new home will find these places filled more with the kind of content they expect, along with some UI improvements and stability that people are feverishly working on right now.
Mine took almost three weeks. Was sat in customs for days and then out for delivery for three days because my address was labelled incorrectly.