Hmm. I’m not sure what the advantage would be over just creating communities on existing instances, then, if someone else is still going to be the admin.
Hmm. I’m not sure what the advantage would be over just creating communities on existing instances, then, if someone else is still going to be the admin.
Sure. What’s your plan for moderating content like piracy, death threats, CSAM, and terrorism?
Apparently. I think it ended after Halo CE was released for Mac. I’d say it was late 80s up through around 2000.
Assuming that the account mentioned in the linked dev update post is the one that commented underneath it, you can see it for yourself. Go to the dev update post, go to the account page, and scroll back through the comments until you see the ones OP is talking about.
I am against the L4s bot, because it posts a lot of non-technology news. Twitter changing its rules is not news, let alone technology news.
Right, but going by the account that commented under the dev post, the first is the one we’re talking about. The second account exists, but hasn’t made any posts or comments at all.
Lemmy has separate usernames and display names.
The account is not an hour old. You can click through the links and see for yourself that it’s the same account.
Oh that reminds me, Voat happened. It wasn’t a code fork but a clone, and it was also filled with right-wing garbage.
Tildes is still around too, but I think it’s got even less traction than lemmy.
Did anyone do that with reddit? It used to be open source too.
Right. Discord is IRC-like, but all of the “servers” are just a logical separation within Discord.
Fair enough.
From an end user perspective, it feels like it’s operationally stable, though I don’t know about developmentally stable. Maybe it’s worth a 1.0 release soon. Lots of people are running it in production now.
If these are API-breaking changes, shouldn’t you bump the major version? https://semver.org/
From a purely financial perspective, yes. From a managerial capex vs opex perspective, no.
Sure, if you want to only talk about AAA games, yeah, the cost is going up. But in general, cost has gone down.
The cost to develop has gone down, if anything. You don’t need powerful hardware. You don’t need expensive industry software. You don’t need proprietary devkits. You can create a perfectly good game on an old laptop with Blender, Krita, Aseprite, Unity, Unreal, Godot. You can target consoles on regular hardware and regular consoles.
Feel free. It’s open source.
And that happens by people linking to it.
I use the browser extensions for convenience: https://web.archive.org/