Moved from @Crul@lemmy.world
Fixed, thanks!
I dind’t saw them, thanks!
I edited the post with the english versions.
Thanks!
I tried Pixelfed (very briefly) not so long ago. I didn’t find a propper way to search for content. How do you discover new content?
I’ve been hearing a lot about https://micro.blog recently. I haven’t tried it, or blogged in a long time.
AFAIK it supports ActivityPub.
I also found a post in one micro.blog with a few of alternatives:
TL;DR: Tumblr / Ghost / Blot / Mastodon / Write.as / Jekyll
https://book.micro.blog/alternative-platforms/
EDIT: Manton Reece is the founder and lead developer of micro.blog
A couple of tools to help finding the original sources:
Also, thanks to @Blaze@discuss.tchncs.de and @Stamets@startrek.website for the mentions :).
My not-very-helpful 2 cents: this is how it worked on reddit and kind of what expected for lemmy. But there could be a setting to change the behavior.
Non-expert answer (those who know more, please correct): only public content is (needs to be) federated. That’s (one of the reasons) why you cannot log in with the same account on different servers. Only the server you are registered in stores your private account data (AFAIK).
On the default frontend there is a button on the home page:
https://lemmy.ml/create_community
EDIT: Some instances have restricted community creation. It works on lemm.ee (if you are logged in): https://lemm.ee/create_community
I watched the video yesterday and I couldn’t really understand what the plan is. What I got was something like “the corps are too big for the consumers to do anything and laws are very slow to made”.
Did I miss something about the “audacious(?)” plan?
Photoshop on WINE can be made to work, but it’s a terribly bad solution for many reasons.
May I ask the main reasons? This is probably the most important point regarding my migration to linux and I thought that Wine would be a proper solution for Photoshop.
Thanks!
The only working public generic mlmym instance I am aware is: https://o.opnxng.com/
From this gist by rystaf.
LightDM says it’s a Display Manager.
I know that naming is hard but, oh my…, terms are so confusing when you’re starting:
… I’m still not sure which ones are synonyms, sub categories or independent components :/.
I’m an ultra-noob, so those who know more please correct me.
I’m playing with Linux VMs and recently I installed Debian to check it out. When it asked what DE I wanted, I chose all of them :).
The only hard conflict (AFAIK) is the [compontent / feature responsible for loging in] (I don’t know the technical term). Because each DE comes with a different one, you need to choose one.
What I found very confusing in practice is that I could see some DE apps and configuration settings from other DEs. So, unless you know what belongs to what, it’s a bit of a mess (in my VERY limited experience).
Oooh… I see. I didn’t understand how broad the Desktop Env really are. Is not that they manage “a lot of things regarding the desktop and windows”… is just like a bundle of apps.
Now it’s starting to sound like a sub-distro inside the distros, but I think this is a good point to stop bothering you. Thanks again!
So, just to check I understood:
Now… the next questions (if you have the patience :P) are:
Thanks for the answers!
Thanks for the info!
I crossposted this to (what I considered) the relevant communities, where I added that as an edit.