waigl 2w ago • 100%
Going by what exactly people these days will label as "marxist", I'm going to go with coincidence.
waigl 1mo ago • 14%
Is the "Fire Storm" Emblem on the front of the car on the billboard making the whole thing look AI generated, or am I getting paranoid? Or maybe both?
waigl 1mo ago • 100%
Buddhism is also much younger than 8500 years, and its arrival in Japan much more recent again.
waigl 1mo ago • 100%
The Jōmon period lasted longer than stated here. According to Wikipedia, it lasted from 14000 BCE (so 16000 years ago) to around 300 BCE (i.e. ~2300 years ago).
waigl 1mo ago • 8%
Oh no, what bullshit is it this time?
waigl 1mo ago • 93%
Does that mean you'll do typesetting now?
waigl 1mo ago • 13%
I'm not going to pretend Harris is not the only sane yet realistic option atm, but those "policies", at least what's shown in that screenshot here…
Those aren't policies, those are empty feel-good slogans. They are ambitions at best, and extremely vague ones at that. You could come up with just about any actual policy from just about any political camp and make a passable argument for how it fits in there.
waigl 1mo ago • 100%
The rules explicitly say "No AI art".
waigl 1mo ago • 100%
The only label on the map that's both on Latin and in old German.
waigl 2mo ago • 87%
Because after moving very slowly and steadily for just about forever, the other galaxies will suddenly make a jump of like ten thousandth of a degree.
waigl 2mo ago • 100%
Imagine the following:
You actually can stop the time by snapping you fingers, but it stops time for the entire universe, including yourself, with the exception of one single observer on some unimportant planet in the Andromeda galaxy. After 100 years from the POV of that observer, time resumes again.
Would you even be able to tell?
waigl 2mo ago • 100%
Is OpenBSD seriously still using CVS for development?
waigl 2mo ago • 100%
I can see it going both ways. Talking about execution times, this would be an exaggeration, but then, these memes always are.
waigl 2mo ago • 100%
Here's something I don't understand: Why don't they just make the drone target the jammer when it's jammed? That's pretty much the only signal that's clear as day in these conditions, and when it's done, there's one less jammer…
waigl 2mo ago • 100%
Attempted electrical substation sabotage is an easy way to fix your loneliness forever. And also all of your other problems.
waigl 2mo ago • 100%
Er lässt sich von superdümmlichen Mobile Games ausnehmen, sie ist zu doof um zu verstehen, was eine Frage ist — Match made in heaven, oder?
waigl 2mo ago • 100%
Probably just plugged it in but kept the message open for half an hour.
waigl 2mo ago • 77%
Huh. Neat. But why? Seems like a lot of effort just to have your soil eventually washed away anyway…
The photon UI under photon.lemmy.world does not work for me in Firefox 122 under Linux, showing nothing but blank page when I open it. It works in Chromium and in Firefox on Android. When I open the developer console, I get the following error message: ```Uncaught (in promise) TypeError: e.moderation is undefined```
Crossgeposted von: https://lemmy.world/post/76993 > It is read-only, no new submissions allowed, but it is no longer private.
Is there any lemmy community for finding and discussing other communities, in the sense of "Hey, I am interested in this and that topic, which community should I join?"
I see kbin.social mentioned here and there where lemmy is discussed. How are those two related? Are they linked up, or are those completely separate communities?
It seems like what i2p is doing largely overlaps with what tor does. How do the two compare, and why would you use one over the other?
I see plenty of posts talking about a huge influx of new users to lemmy.ml lately. Can we get some numbers about that? How many new users per day are we talking? How does that translate to number of requests per second (or minute) on the frontend? What kind of hardware is lemmy.ml running on? Is it just a single server? Can lemmy instances be run on a loadbalanced cluster? I'm really interested to see how efficient and resilient the lemmy software really is, at the moment I am getting the impression that it is buckling under the load of, honestly, not even that many users...
In some cases when I post a comment to a topic on a different instance, the comment will seemingly just disappear into thin air. Posting and commenting to the Lemmy Support community seems to work mostly fine, even though it is on lemmy.ml while my account is on lemmy.world. Any comments I tried to make on feddit.de just plain disappeared, though, no trace of them anywhere, not in my profile, not in the discussion thread, not even on the actual feddit.de instance. Any idea what's going wrong here?
See title, is there any way to make lemmy not automatically blur the image thumbnails in posts marked as "NSFW"?