How did you feel it was different from the first time around ? Ive been meaning to pay it a second time but haven’t quite took the leap yet.
How did you feel it was different from the first time around ? Ive been meaning to pay it a second time but haven’t quite took the leap yet.
Start here https://github.com/hotwired/turbo/pull/972 and then https://github.com/hotwired/turbo/pull/973
Tldr someone moved a popular repo from typescript to JavaScript, the negative response was quite overwhelming.
Not sure of others having been having issues with steam save file cloud sync but it seems like every other time i try to start the game it hangs on syncing errors. Wonder if it’s just me or maybe a bunch of people due to the larger than expected concurrent player number.
I wouldn’t be surprised if users of most new apps with a lot of hype follow this trend. Everyone jumps in at first, as hype dies a lot of users stop visiting, and after that is when # of daily users stabilizes and begins the organic growth. We are still in the hype dying phase, transitioning to normal growth.
For that reason, I dont put much weight in headlines like this. It will take several more months or a year to really make a conclusion on whether the app is a success or failure.
Wide as an ocean, deep as a puddle isnt as meaningful of an experince as some thats maybe wide as a pond and deep as a pond. 100+ hours is useless if those hours are boring. Id rather they make shorter more meaningful experiences.
I guess its just a limited release rn for beta testers or something like that ?
Litterally watching this right now as i scrolled past this post. Technology connections is a great channel.
Was eyeing this for a little bit but this post might be the one that makes me buy it
While there is definitely a bunch of content popping up now thanks to to influx of actuve users, there still are some more niche communities that were pretty active on old reddit that i guess just can get to critical mass on lemmy and so are pretty dead. I hope that can change going into the future though.
Im not familiar with the lemmy source code but i would imagine it would batch fetch comments all at once with one api call (or maybe a few if the thread is big enough). Fewer api calls is less load on a lemmy server, less chance that any one of the calls them fails, etc. At least, if i wrote lemmy id i would do something like that.
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How fast can one really read 6000 post ? Assuming you read 100 post a minute, is that 1 hour of usage before getting cut off for the day? I dont really have a feeling how many posts a normal twitter user would go through in a minute.
Linking from else where in the post… They did push into a test environment and it looked fine. the issue here resulted from the immense user load in production which did not show up in the test environment.
Fwiw, Sync has been seeing ratelimit messages at various times for the last month at least. One example from 30 days back https://www.reddit.com/r/redditsync/comments/13rrpmp/_/
Whether this is to do with the overall removal of 3PAs or not, im not sure, just pointing out.
Sucks that you couldnt get it working yet, but there are bound to be problems at this scale.
Anyone have any resources for learning what running a lemmy server is like ? Seems pretty interesting
Go lemmy, cant wait for sync for lemmy to come out too!
There was a hank green video about this a year back. Video link here, the tldr was that container ships used to use a type of fuel that was both bad for the environment but also really good at cloud seeding. More clouds shielded the oceans surface from the sun, artificially reducing its temperature. But in 2020 regulations made container ships move to a fuel that didnt seed clouds as much, so fewer clouds, higher temperature.
So i guess one potential take away from that, if its right, is that the temperatures are not “suddenly” getting worse, but rather have been artificially depressed and we are only now going to what it should be.