[-] early_riser@lemmy.radio 3 points 1 hour ago

I was on Reddit from mid 2012 to mid 2023, across a few accounts and with a hiatus of a few months here and there. I had been passively looking at less centralized forms of personal interaction on the web, trying to find traditional forums to replace the subs I frequented. Like a lot of people here, the API issues and the news of Reddit courting investors left a bad taste in my mouth.

I deleted my account, but I still lurk on a few subs, and my IT job means I have to dig through reddit posts on a regular basis for troubleshooting purposes.

[-] early_riser@lemmy.radio 2 points 1 week ago

This is correct. I use "ASCII art" to refer mostly to fancy CLI welcome messages

[-] early_riser@lemmy.radio 2 points 1 week ago

I miss those thin serif fonts that were all over tech magazines in the 80s and 90s

55

Some text from a constructed world I play around with that leans into an 80s tech aesthetic. FTL communication exists, but the data rate is comparable to a dial up modem. Vibrant multimedia experiences like we see on the modern web do exist, but isolated to planet-wide internetworks. Interplanetary communication is a purely text-based affair.

The text is read from right to left, and is just the word for operating system in one of my conlangs.

[-] early_riser@lemmy.radio 2 points 1 week ago

I wouldn't doubt it, though MW seems hard to manage.

[-] early_riser@lemmy.radio 5 points 1 week ago

This looks interesting.

Seems like it's still early days yet, but are there plans to add things like namespaces and categories?

[-] early_riser@lemmy.radio 4 points 1 week ago

I'm not thinking of a single distributed wiki, but something more like Fandom where you can edit pages on other wikis that are federated to yours.

[-] early_riser@lemmy.radio 7 points 1 week ago

Easy hosting isn't quite the issue. Dokuwiki is trivial to self host. What I'd like something that's a happy medium between requiring account creation to edit pages and letting literally every rando with an IP address go to town.

87

I absolutely love wiki walking through random obscure fan wikis, but I hate how most are on Fandom.

I think a federated wiki solution makes sense. I could see it as an evolution of the interwiki concept.

[-] early_riser@lemmy.radio 2 points 1 week ago

I'd like to see a federated, self hostable forum platform. I believe NodeBB is implementing or has implemented activitypub, but while it's open source it seems even less of a turnkey solution than Lemmy or Mastodon.

[-] early_riser@lemmy.radio 26 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

I'm getting two points from the article. One is addressed handily by the Fediverse, the other is not.

First the centralized (I prefer to say "urbanized") nature of social media means a handful of companies control all the conversations. The Fediverse is a decent (though not perfect) solution to that problem, and I think everyone on here knows that.

However, the article also talks about the problems with the format of social media, not just who's hosting the platform. On traditional forums, conversations can last for years, but on Reddit, Discord, etc. new topics quickly bury old ones, no matter how lively those old topics are. Sure, you can choose to sort by "last comment" which replicates the traditional forum presentation with topic bumping, but it's not the default, even on Lemmy, so 90% of people won't bother.

I get to know people on traditional forums, even miss them if they leave, but on Reddit, comments are just disembodied thoughts manifesting in the ether. That may be due to the size of the community rather than the format, though.

1
submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by early_riser@lemmy.radio to c/nostupidquestions@lemmy.world

I want to have a running thread and use the OP as a table of contents linking to specific comments within the thread.

[-] early_riser@lemmy.radio 1 points 3 weeks ago

Texan here. We learned Mexican Spanish (seseo, yeismo, ustedes for everyone, etc) It's been years since I had to use it for my job but IIRC there's a difference in the subjunctive verbs as well.

There are also distinct varieties of Spanish spoken in the US that differ from Mexican Spanish. As a general rule, if a common word has a similar-sounding English cognate (often false cognate) the cognate will be used. truck = troca instead of camión, concrete (as in cement) = concreto instead of hormigón, carpet = carpeta instead of alfombra, to park (a car) = parquear instead of estacionar, and so on. This is from my years working as a bilingual call center agent.

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early_riser

joined 2 years ago