• 42 Posts
  • 163 Comments
Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: August 3rd, 2020

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  • wiki_me@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlWhat is wayland?
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    6 months ago

    On top of what other said, the wayland project also maintains the wayland protocols repository which includes additional protocols that are approved by a “committee” that includes representatives from wayland protocol implementations (wlroots, kde , gnome , smithay etc). for example now they are working on color management.

    There appears to be a consensus among people working on window manager implementations that X has to go and wayland is the future.

    Wayland has technical benefits, if you want the nitty gritty details see this.

    Basically X11 is bad IPC at this point.

    Also be careful with what you read online, I see misinformation about it relatively often.


  • wiki_me@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlIs Ubuntu deserving the hate?
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    6 months ago

    It’s pitched as a open source operation system, yet the snap store is closed source and vendor locked, one of the reasons some of us use Liniux is because we prefer open source (and there are rational justifications for that).

    Hate is a strong word, but there is legitimate criticism, I also think the closed source nature of snap led to the fact that it has no volunteers and that eventually caused malware to appear on the snap store multiple time, it never happened on flathub as far as i know.

    Today for beginner i think opensuse and linux mint are better.

    Regarding debian having old packages , i use nix but it is fairly immature, flathub should also work.






  • Before the Reddit exodus, I don’t remember many active servers besides Lemmy.ml and Lemmygrad (there was Lemm.ee and Lemmy.ca but they both had like 3 posts a week). Hexbear wasn’t federated, and servers were mostly being desperately spun up in anticipation for a flood of users who would crash the network.

    There were about 80 before the exodus (may 2023), compared to to 40 (may 2022) and 15 (may 2021), about double the servers every year which is good considering this is “word to mouth” growth, even older data shows a clear growth trend, my guess is that i and others didn’t really see them because they are some dude community, even today i think i will have a problem listing more then 5-10 lemmy servers.


  • That said, Torvalds continued, “Rust has not really shown itself as the next great big thing. But I think during next year, we’ll actually be starting to integrate drivers and some even major subsystems that are starting to use it actively. So it’s one of those things that is going to take years before it’s a big part of the kernel. But it’s certainly shaping up to be one of those.”

    I don’t know about that, languages which are based on standards (c++ , javascript, c) seem to have much better enduring popularity, i don’t want to see rust becoming less and less popular which will lead to less available developers (like what is happening with ruby).


  • unfortunately other data is not encouraging , the number of servers is both down since the exodus and in the recent month.

    I think the number of servers is a interesting metric to look on, it correlates with users who are tech savy and are early adopters, before the exodus the number of servers was growing consistently , despite the number of users mostly staying the same, That was IMO an indication of the relative quality of lemmy at the time and indeed it seemed to got the most benefits from the exodus out of all the reddit alternatives.

    compare that with peertube which shows consistent growth in the number of servers (see this month, and long term), I think what makes them better then lemmy currently is that they currently seem better at prioritizing feature development by using a dedicated site.

    Also the total donations have declined in the last month (from €3962 to €3,771 today), So i think we should try to not get overconfident and work to secure the future of lemmy or some other open source reddit alternative.



  • This shouldn’t really make any difference. In lemmy it would appear as a normal reply notification once per thread.

    Still an annoyance, i post on reddit and lemmy for years, to keep having to delete that reply for years to come could accumulate to a significant amount of time, and small segments of time wasted tend to add up

    I’ll see if I can expand the bot, but I don’t want each reply to end up like a wall of text.

    You could add the “about this bot” the line above it ( making a two lines message) but this could be cryptic and therefore off putting for new lemmy users (creating a bad impression of the platform).

    That would defeat the purpose, as the discovery from mastodon would happen days/weeks/months after that thread was active.

    When you reply the person you reply to still get notifications , lemmy “active” sort bumps posts when they get new comments (see docs) and anyway most of the time i assume people just read comments and don’t respond, and the idea is to make lemmy more discoverable so after that they could visit lemmy and participate more actively.



  • That might be useful if someone will want to learn if a particular project is not really open source, and raise awareness to the issue of open washing, if it will get enough links it might appear on search results raising even more awareness to the issue.

    You could always start it, ask for positive feed back saying it will motivate you and validate that the efforts you are doing are useful, you could later abandon it and someone else might take it and continue to maintaining it.


  • Repeatedly getting tagged by this bot sounds like it is a PITA.

    Having a command you can send with a private message so it won’t tag you could be useful , something like :

    dontTagMe: @wiki_me@lemmy.ml .

    It’s also pretty confusing if you encounter a post the first time, having it write something like :

    new lemmy post: ‘Moving media library to bigger HDD’ on community #Selfhosted by @rambos

    (Replying in this thread will appear as a comment in the lemmy discussion.)

    about this bot (link to a explanation)

    Could be more understandable.

    Regarding you saying on the read me you are not a rust developer A tutorial on youtube implies you can learn the basics in aboutt 3h, since your contribution gets reviewed by experienced developer that should be enough and you can learn more things on the fly (Assuming there are more things you want to contribute to on lemmy).

    having a command where the moderators of a community can tweak the frequency of posting (or maybe even posting just the top post for day/week/month etc) could also be helpful