NatoBoram

joined 1 year ago
[–] NatoBoram@lemm.ee 4 points 2 days ago (5 children)

There's also lots of people who made an account in multiple instances before realizing that you don't have to do that

[–] NatoBoram@lemm.ee 3 points 2 months ago

That UI is called VSCode

At the top of your .yaml file, you can set a JSON Schema. Example:

# yaml-language-server: $schema=https://json.schemastore.org/prometheus.json

scrape_configs:
  - job_name: caddy
    static_configs:
      - targets:
          - caddy:2019

This way, you don't have to memorize every possible setting and what it does and risk making a typo in the config. VSCode will just tell you.

[–] NatoBoram@lemm.ee 3 points 2 months ago

What's even the point then?

The point is that you can enable each separate extension you want running on your code editor or uninstall them if you're unsatisfied. This makes it as light as you want it to be - or as heavy as you need it to.

I was doing fine with just vim and tmux

VSCode is like vim without vim controls and in a browser. Seen that way, it makes more sense. With Vim, you have to hunt for obscure Github repositories and follow arcane installation instructions for hidden extensions that you may or may not need and you have to learn a whole-ass keyboard-shortcut-based programming language just to use any of it.

With VSCode, you click on Extensions, search what you want and it'll probably be there unless it's a toxic ecosystem like PHP/C# or some niche ecosystem that no one heard about.

[–] NatoBoram@lemm.ee 0 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Your "minimum wage" link states multiple times that it is only for federal employees, not for the general population. There are still states where you can get less than 10$/h.

[–] NatoBoram@lemm.ee 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Clients can work around it by making a search on the home instance that filters by community id and submitter id. Something like this.

[–] NatoBoram@lemm.ee 0 points 4 months ago (1 children)

You can't have content addressing because it's mutable. On the other hand, UUIDs are made for that. There's even multiple types of UUIDs made for distributed computing with namespaces and such.

[–] NatoBoram@lemm.ee 0 points 4 months ago (6 children)

Amazing. One feature that is desperately needed on Lemmy is to open a post in another instance, not just a community or a user.

[–] NatoBoram@lemm.ee 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Tumblr is a blogging experience that's similar to Twitter, but more focused on the user itself than on the central feed.

  • You have your blogs and you post there. Yes, you can have many blogs.
  • There's global feeds with posts from all users, potentially including yours.
  • Posts can have non-intrusive hashtags, meaning they are not #partOfThePost, but in a separate, smaller, dedicated section of the post.
  • You can't post stuff to someone else's blog, but you can comment on their posts. Comments are tiny next to the post.
  • You can quote posts, but that makes a duplicate in a blockquote rather than linking to the original post like Twitter
[–] NatoBoram@lemm.ee 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Since we're doing meaningless comparisons:

Am I doing that right?