I've found that for single person purposes, a RAID array is unnecessary. I just buy beefy 8TB drives. If it dies, just download any recent torrents again or pull a backup
gerbilOFdoom
Oooo thank you for the links, that's the part I had a difficult time with. I don't think I'm subscribed to enough things, or I don't check frequently enough, to get the information updates.
I'll see what I'm qualified to do. I don't know Rust in particular so this is likely to turn into a rabbit hole that produces nothing but a greater knowledgebase in my brain for the next time I get fiesty about something.
I've been spending some time considering the future technology stack of Beehaw. I'd love to work on some kind of moderation tools, especially because I know that they could be inserted alongside the existing codebase - even if in an exceedingly hacky way. Heck, even client side site scraping with content matching is an option if for some horrible reason we had to.
The fun part is not being able to ask those who run the server about specifics for what's needed.
Computer Science student here.
Forking Lemmy does fork its bad habits but doing so would at least give us the option of making direct improvements to the mod tools.
From what I've read, causing deleted content to get deleted quickly is a smaller change. Advertising that shortened deletion delay and giving the admins a "these keep our shit, yeet their federation privileges but check again every day and notify me when that changes" script wouldn't be too hard to create.
We might even be better off ignoring the Lemmy codebase for mod tools altogether. If we outright ignore cross-platform compatibility, we can make a mod tools API independent of Lemmy-proper that does what's needed and a JavaScript-controlled interface to sit on top or a separate toolset altogether.
I'm pretty busy right now but I rely on Beehaw for decent social media. I'd be willing to put a bit of time into it.
I don't think it's a joke or even paranoid, just a bee noticing the effect of a quirk of human brains.
Noticing an illogical thing because their brain took a shortcut and dusted the fallout under a rug isn't an easy experience. The first instinct is not to assume our mind has broken, it's to try to find the answer to make the event explainable. Often that involves thinking only inside the scope of the event because no other information is immediately apparent.
Consider the sheer cost of this. Shipping, especially overnight shipping, is incredibly expensive. Stores get stock on on or two regular days of the week and have a crew dedicated to just unloading that truck and getting everything on shelves, a process that takes days.
Stores could not profit enough to put items in your path in the hope that you might buy them in this way.
Most likely the change here is that you're now noticing these items where you previously didn't. This is a documented psychological effect.
People often look at a car they like and suddenly see that same model of car all over. People didn't suddenly buy those cars to drive around for you, this isn't the Truman Show. You're just noticing them where before you didn't even register them as anything other than a backdrop, a random blade of grass.
JVM can run on any platform that supports Java, as you're building Kotlin directly into Java bytecode.
Multiplatform is for building native applications while using a single backend logic. You'll have to write separate handlers for everything unique to the platform, according to documentation.
It's pretty easy to just not put the AI tag on things, or to strip such things away from an image.
Whooooops, that's what I get for not verifying things sitting in my brain for a long time
Learned Language Model, a form of machine learning that people tend to call "AI". ChatGPT is an LLM
Old software that can actually be superceded by some newer tech if someone feels like doing so.
Easy to use, lots of documentation. 10/10