[-] henfredemars@lemmy.world 37 points 2 months ago

I see this upcoming election will be the final one. Nice work.

[-] henfredemars@lemmy.world 12 points 1 year ago

This sounds like a bug to me. At a minimum, it should be renamed to local subscribers rather than imply that it's the total count.

[-] henfredemars@lemmy.world 22 points 1 year ago

This is definitely a sink-or-swim moment for Lemmy. If this is going to work, this is the chance. Twitter and Reddit are imploding. Users have a reason to try something new and are willing to deal with young, buggy platforms because it's better than the alternative and they needed an Internet home. My upvote taking ten seconds to register is itself the knife's edge of creation, a new birth.

[-] henfredemars@lemmy.world 16 points 1 year ago

Just not using the app is better than using the app.

[-] henfredemars@lemmy.world 8 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I love that a service that isn't making a buck off of us gets levels of engagement that for-profit social networks would kill for.

This is happening because:

  • Novelty, because new is fun. This will go down over time.
  • The most passionate users are more likely to be early adopters. More casual users are coming.
  • Smaller network means your content is less likely to be covered before. This factor will go down over time.
  • Fediverse encourages multiple related communities, which means your specific contributions are more likely to be seen by other users.
  • Lack of bots/astroturfing leads to more positive interactions. Bots will likely increase over time.

Therefore, I expect engagement will go down over time, but I am hopeful it will reach a higher point of stability because the fediverse design seems better at getting more varied content seen by its users, and it makes it harder for a small group of people or posts to dominate the discussion space.

PS: Anybody know how to add a space after the last bullet in a list?

[-] henfredemars@lemmy.world 8 points 1 year ago

But it's Unix-like!

Uses a Linux VM for all the assignments anyway.

[-] henfredemars@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago

Somewhat, but it's just the "how's the weather?" of this community because most everyone is here from Reddit, so it's a starting point to me. I don't think Lemmy exists just to spite Reddit, and I participate in discussions having nothing to do with the subject.

[-] henfredemars@lemmy.world 29 points 1 year ago

Underrated comment. I picked it because I had no idea what I was doing and it sounded all-encompassing and I wanted access to everything. I didn't even know what an instance was. I just picked it because it sounded like a good guess to get access to all of Lemmy.

104

More concretely, I'm asking this: why aren't applications compiled fully to native code before distribution rather than bytecode that runs on some virtual machine or runtime environment?

Implementation details aside, fundamentally, an Android application consists of bytecode, static resources, etc. In the Java world, I understand that the main appeal of having the JVM is to allow for enhanced portability and maybe also improved security. I know Android uses ART, but it remains that the applications are composed of processor-independent bytecode that leads to all this complex design to convert it into runnable code in some efficient manner. See: ART optimizing profiles, JIT compilation, JIT/AOT Hybrid Compilation... that's a lot of work to support this complex design.

Android only officially supports arm64 currently, so why the extra complexity? Is this a vestigial remnant of the past? If so, with the move up in minimum supported versions, I should think Android should be transitioning to a binary distribution model at a natural point where compatibility is breaking. What benefit is being realized from all this runtime complexity?

[-] henfredemars@lemmy.world 129 points 1 year ago

It's been said to death but at heart, I've always felt that when it comes to piracy, it's a service issue, not a cost issue.

Except for you Adobe. That's a cost issue.

[-] henfredemars@lemmy.world 7 points 1 year ago

I recently experienced this while building an upgrade for my 3D printer. The upgrade kit included a touchscreen. I found out later that the touchscreen was effectively its own separate computer with more than 10x more resources than the actual computer inside the 3D printer that was doing the most important calculations.

The compute and memory resource constraints were basically nonexistent factors in the design of the printer and the upgrade kit. Merely, a simpler computer was easier to design for and characterize, so the printer itself had a very simple computer, and for the UX, a "beefy" computer was much easier to program. It's bizarre seeing how little the amount of computer resources mattered. It might as well have been free.

[-] henfredemars@lemmy.world 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

It's really, really smart that it looks like Reddit in terms of page layout. It satisfies the brain that likes its patterns and routines. I even put my favorite Lemmy app right where I used to launch from to satisfy the muscle memory. I really hope this sticks.

[-] henfredemars@lemmy.world 8 points 1 year ago

Running Connect for Lemmy here on Android. It seems nice and minimalist. I was a little dissuaded from trying Jerboa with some of the negative reviews.

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henfredemars

joined 1 year ago