Where do they get data from?
Where do they get data from?
never give ai things you do not want to be public even if they let you opt out :)
Installed Linux alongside windows 10. Cachy OS specific with drivers 555 running Wayland without any issues :)
To be true everything we post online can be used for training. Reddit is just made for money :P Kinda using more Lemmy now for posting and reddit just for browsing like archive.
Ye NVIDIA sadly they have CUDA monopoly and AMD AI is not yet mature :/
I’m still using x11 as Wayland always make my screen blinking and tearing no metter what distro or driver version.
From what I see PS4 with firmware 11.00 and under can be JB
Funny fact I just was thinking about asking if we could have good alternative for Stackoverflow that supports federation.
It got bloated and something was affected network speeds.
I switched my server to AlmaLinux after Debian started making mess.
I have backup on my self hosted git :D
For me mastodon was worst experience from side of admin of instance and from user experience too. Thinking it’s a little bit overcomplicated and limited. On the other hand hosting services like Lemmy and PeerTube are just breez :)
Syncthing is more like P2P tool for syncing files between own private devices rather than being things like torrents.
Though I’m more intrested to see how it looks from XMPP side aka servers vs DMs
Love random browsing lemmy and seeing posting screenshot with my bsky server :D
Does this work with Discord normal accounts?
FOSS Windows cant be. Though would not trust custom isos.
Having soundtrack on the loop :)
for me bigest issue is to switch from something else
As a PeerTube instance owner, I would say that not everyone needs to join a single instance (that would be the biggest mistake). Instead, if you can self-host one and invite people you like and know, they can provide quality content. Also, having multiple smaller instances makes it easier to moderate and have quality control. Federation and direct subscription to channels also improve instance discovery.