As many others have already said, Lemmy is fully indexable by search engines. In fact, in this very community there have been posts about Lemmy content being above other results from more prominent sites like Reddit for certain topics.
Male 18-year-old FOSS and GNU/Linux activist and user
As many others have already said, Lemmy is fully indexable by search engines. In fact, in this very community there have been posts about Lemmy content being above other results from more prominent sites like Reddit for certain topics.
What? There is no “Fediverse objection” to indexing by search engines. Who told you that? Lemmy is actively being indexed and is showing up when you search for posts.
Snake case for all kinds of file names and camel case for programming
And KHTML! Basically, KDE work is the foundation of the browser engines behind Chromium and Safari.
That’s also confusing and it is not the full saying. The full saying is “free as in free speech, not free beer”.
From the FSF website:
Free software is a matter of liberty, not price. Think of “free” as in “free speech”, not as in “free beer”. Free software is a matter of the users’ freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software.
I don’t think that “live chat” is fitting for Lemmy. It is an aggregator in the first place. There are already other FOSS services for live chatting, such as Matrix. IMHO, adding such a feature to Lemmy would be out of the scope of the project and probably result in a bad and dysfunctional implementation.
P2P? How is that supposed to work? You cannot expect every user that uploads a video to even have remotely enough uptime for any arbitrary interested person to successfully watch their video
That would then mean that small instances would have to prove themselves before being accepted in the wider network of instances and just end up centralizing the fediverse.
Most of us want the Fediverse to eternally decentralise. Imho, this would be the optimal scenario. Whitelists would be a major obstacle to the décentralisation effort.
But if we want people on Lemmy who don’t know what Linux is, then we need to avoid that massive barrier of asking users to pick an instance. And the second massive barrier of registration applications.
How so? Those things do not have anything to do with each other. The concept of Lemmy instances can literally be explained in less than a minute.
It is good to be against a genocidal wannabe-empire. Everyone should be “anti-Israel”
Hijab is a symbol of the oppression of women in the Arab world. It is good that they are outlawed for the Olympics
Considering that he reached for his right ear (the subsequently bleeding one) before he fell, it must’ve been a bullet that flew really close.
Just wanted to post. Looks like he has a ruptured eardrum?
I’d call that a win
Principally it is possible if you can iterate over all the posts and comments and inject them into the database of their new home.
I agree completely. Blocked the instance only now despite them becoming more and more annoying each month.
Debian-based distros are usually the ones with the most official support and documentation with regard to Android.
Windows -> OpenSUSE Tumbleweed -> Ubuntu -> Debian GNU/Linux -> EndeavourOS
Currently using Debian and EndeavourOS in parallel as the distributions I have settled on.
Okay, but understand that from for example my point of view, your perception appears really skewed because my GNU/Linux installations have never “destroyed [themselves] after a while”. Respectfully, I think that you project your Linux failures unto the entire ecosystem, based on issues that were unique to you.
Yep, gun culture is really big in Switzerland