My personal domain name is AZK.Ware (azkware.net) so it follows that my machines are called azkware-desktop, azkware-server and azkware-laptop
Developer, Free Culture activist, self-hoster, auxlanger [EO-IO-LdP], translator-adapter, A11Y advocate, free-time gamer. Proudly self-hosting my instance from Santa Ana, Costa Rica. Posts generally in English and Spanish.
Desarrollador, activista de la Cultura Libre, promotor del autohospedaje, aficionado a las auxilenguas [EO-IO-LdP], traductor-adaptador, promotor de accesibilidad, juego videojuegos en mi tiempo libre. Orgullosamente autohospedando mi instancia desde Santa Ana, Costa Rica. Mensajes por lo general en inglés y español.
#fedi22 #english #español #esperanto #idolinguo #lingwadeplaneta #uropi #a11y #cybersecurity #gamer #selfhosting #costarica #freeculture #conlangs #softwarelibre #freesoftware #webdeveloper #linux #gnu #copyleft #creativecommons #foss #opensource #programming #security #technology #accessibility #a11y #tootfinder #tfr #searchable
My personal domain name is AZK.Ware (azkware.net) so it follows that my machines are called azkware-desktop, azkware-server and azkware-laptop
For YouTube it’s PeerTube and for Twitch it’s probably OwnCast
You could also use Hubzilla
My electricity bill went up 50% due to the AC alone. It’s getting THAT bad
Fair enough, but just letting people show up in the cafeteria and then shooing them out after the fact because they didn’t know where they came from is not good moderation. Having a bouncer at the door and only allowing clients from places they trust, on request, would be a less taxing moderation policy. (Which is to say, working on an allow-list basis and blocking everyone else unless the instance specifically requests federation with Beehaw, and the latter approves the former’s moderation policies)
In which case you should default to forbidding every other server, and only accept incoming entries after the server has been vetted as safe. Letting people in with the expectation of this being a public space and then shooing them out when you found out somebody wandered into your terrain is not a good look. Having a fence in the first place and ask for an ID at the entrance is what you probably should have done instead.
Again, it was a terrible idea to use a federated software if you wanted to have full control of who could and could not interact with your instance. But it’s too late to move Beehaw to use Tildes instead, so why not make the instance require logging in to view content, defederate entirely, and just be its own self-contained thing from now on?
Banning the vast majority of users from interacting with your instance at all solely because of where they decided to make their first account on isn’t exactly nuanced either, and I get the technical reasons why you had to do so. But if that’s the main goal, then removing federation altogether, and expecting users to submit to the approval process before interacting with your instance, would have been the better procedure. Think less Starbucks, more of an exclusive cafeteria based on a monthly subscription and with bouncers at the entrance just in case.
So, if that were the case, why not remove federation with everything, and require users to log in to view the content in the first place? That way you would guarantee that everyone that views or interacts with the community is properly vetted, in line with the “coffee shop” analogy you’re establishing here. (Something that would have been best achieved by using a non-federated forum software such as Tildes, but alas, it’s a bit too late to do a platform change)
Well. Guess I’ll have to go and spin my own self-hosted version of Kbin just to be able to follow everything, without being at the mercy of third-party admins cutting my subscriptions in a whim. Also, I sure hope that the communities either move into Beehaw or outside of it, fragmentation out of the users’ control makes the entire point of federation moot.
The 3DS was at its best when playing 2.5D games with a veneer of 3D layering put on top. The Nintendo 3D Classics series and Shovel Knight were a prime example of that.
Been playing Duel Links and Master Duel for years already, because I can’t afford a physical TCG deck. Maybe we should make a sublemmy/community/magazine
Any plans for Beehaw to just fork Lemmy and start applying these quick fixes?
I’m really glad that self-hosters are finally starting to “eat their own dog food” so to speak and finally start to self-host their own community discussions. And what better place to do so than on the Fediverse!
One of the nice things about federation - they can actually follow each other like nothing happened
Yep that sounds like what Skynet would write
From what I gather, it’s a bit of both, but officially the first one
An absolute miracle of a story, and strap your seatbelts because it’s a long one! Especially the fact that their mom died in an air crash, and because of that the duty was on the older sister, who was just 12, to take care of her siblings (one of them just a year old) in the middle of an extremely dense and dangerous jungle. For over a month, mind you. Them surviving with just some dehydration and mosquito bites is nothing short of heroic.
And, of course, ensuring that your IP provider doesn’t run behind a Client-Grade Network Address Translator (CG-NAT). Otherwise, you’re better off renting a Virtual Private Server (VPS) or if you’re particularly strapped of money and have a lot of patience, you can bridge it with your home server using a Virtual Private Network (VPS) and a good amount of scripting to remap the ports accordingly.
That, or a *decent* upscaling algorithm such as xBRZ. Old upscalers like Super 2x SAI made pixel art look like a cheap watercolor, and made later upscalers get a bad fame. Nowadays a good upscaler basically turns the game screen into a vectorized set of lines, and it looks much better, closer to what the pixel artists intended the end result to look like on a big screen.