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Doesn't each community being local to each instance split the audience?
  • I wish communities could be grouped in some way.

    or not 🤷‍♂️

    Sure it's more practical, but your whole community (as in "people") is now centralized on a single point. If you have a single one "gaming" community, and it disappears or is taken over, you lose everything and need to start over from scratch. If you have 3-4 communities spread across different instances, if one of those communities become unusable, it's easier to abandon it to become active on the next one.

    Decentralization is not a silver bullet, but as we've seen during the last year with Twitter and Reddit, it's better than the alternative. Nothing prevents you to subscribe to several similar communities, each with its own flavor, and participate in the one(s) you want.

  • the myth of type safety
  • The boy scout technique: fix your types when you're working on a bug or a feature, one file at a time. Also try to use unknown instead of any for more sensitive parts, it will force you to typecheck.

  • How do you deal with endless cookies dialogues?
  • The EU did its job correctly by forcing sites to ask for consent. How that rule is implemented is up to the sites, and they often choose to do it in the most annoying possible way. And then tell you to blame the EU for it.

    Also as a website owner, you only need to ask for consent when you use more than "strictly necessary" cookies (https://gdpr.eu/cookies/), i.e. cookies that are needed for your site to function normally.

  • Twitter's new TikTok copycat is filled with animal cruelty videos. Elon calls content "Edgy"
  • Sure it's somewhat different, it's just the after picture of torture and not active torture

    Ok so it's different, got it. For a second I was concerned that ya'll were really getting distressed when exposed to a picture of a meal, in the same way a video of an actively tortured animal would distress most people.

    So you know they're different, and yet pretend they're the same to give yourself a moral high ground. Kinda hypocritical. Or do you suffer from cognitive dissonance?

  • Your top 5 plugins?
  • I'm pretty vanilla with my plugins:

    • Omnisearch - disclaimer, I'm the main dev
    • ReadItLater - a scraper to quickly save articles that I reference in my own notes
    • Excalidraw
    • Linter - mainly to automatically format my notes with a createdAt metadata and an h1 title
    • Dataview - I don't use it extensively but I have a few js snippets to query external APIs like Github or Mastodon

    I try to avoid plugins that stray from "standard" markdown, to not rely on Obsidian.

  • What are some fun projects I can use to teach myself Rust?
  • The same author also has a free tutorial here. The ECS library used in it is a bit dated, and it's a good idea to follow the tutorial but use a more modern one (like hecs, or bevy_ecs if you're feeling more comfortable in rust)

  • Is anyone else getting tired about the UI/UX craze where everything needs to be designed like it's meant for braindead users?
  • Agree with this.

    From the op:

    "they're for power users and regular users won't understand them"

    It's right though. 90+% of users are fine with default settings, so it makes sense to hide them. Otherwise, at best it is confusing & intimidating, at worst a lot of users will have an awful UX because they tweak settings they don't understand.

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)0X
    0xSim @fedia.io
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