I've already rooted it with Magisk, I just don't really need Zygisk so I haven't really bothered working around it. The only app I would have needed Zygisk DenyList with was PayPal, and I just use the website in a browser now.
Thanks though!
I've already rooted it with Magisk, I just don't really need Zygisk so I haven't really bothered working around it. The only app I would have needed Zygisk DenyList with was PayPal, and I just use the website in a browser now.
Thanks though!
Given the heated responses from the maintainers here and how quickly this PR was shot down, I very much doubt it
ActivityPub doesn't just push everything on a server to every federated instance like a fire hose.
I'm pretty sure Lemmy does? I run my own instance and that's how it works.
Is Mastodon different?
I didn't come from Kbin and I mostly just lurk here, but I do have an observation.
This is the only post in this community in the last 12 hours. Looking back around a month, there are only a few posts to this community per week. I subscribed to it because I like following Cybersecurity topics, but people trying to find new communities to follow might view it as "inactive" and avoid adding this to their subscriptions list.
Maybe Kbin handles this a bit differently, but here on Lemmy, all content from a community is only delivered to subscribers after they have subscribed. In other words, if I had only just subscribed to this community right now, I'd probably have no idea this post was even created.
With less people subscribing, you have less reach to people that know this community has content, and it becomes a bit of an unfortunate cycle.
I think your weekly threads are a good idea, but I think you may want to start crossposting links to this community to other communities and instances to get people to subscribe, so this one can grow. That will probably naturally drive more people to these weekly threads.
Not sure what you mean. I'm not trying to use an external monitor, I just want to use AR glasses I already own. There's no adapter for that, it's just a USB C cable.
If you haven't been getting security updates, I would definitely consider getting a new phone. Especially if you are not one that stays home a lot. The people who will try to exploit things like Bluetooth will be out and about, not walking up to your home.
As it turns out, the issue I was having earlier was due to CloudFlare blocking my login due to activity that looked like a bot. I cleared that rule and I'm all good now
Will you only be supporting yourself and maybe a small subset of users? If you don't need your instance to scale, you can (shameless self plug) try my deployment script to get yourself running.
It just uses the recommended Postgres configuration as seen in the deployment files in Lemmy's official repo. It would just be in a Docker volume on disk, so if you had thoughts of scaling in the future, and wanted to use a managed Postgres service, I would not recommend using my script.
I run an instance just for myself, CPU resources are so low that pretty much anything you can get in the cloud will be good. Disk space is a much more important factor. In terms of just Lemmy-created data, my personal 10-day instance has stored about 6.2GB of data. 2.4GB of this is just thumbnails. Note that this does not include other things that consume resources, such as my Docker images or my Docker build cache, which I clear manually.
So, that is roughly 640MB of new data generated per day. Your experience will vary depending on how many communities you subscribe to, but that's a good rough estimate. Round it up to 700MB to have a safer estimate. But remember, this is with Lemmy's current rate of activity. If the amount of posts and comments doubles, triples in the future, my storage requirements will likely go up considerably.
I am genuinely not sure what long-term Lemmy maintenance looks like in terms of releasing disk space. I can clear my thumbnail data and be fine, but I wonder what's going to happen with the postgres database. Is there some way to prune old data out of it to save space? Will my cloud storage costs become so unreasonable in a year, that I'll have to stop hosting Lemmy? These are the questions I don't have answers to yet.
If there is something clever you can do to plan ahead and save yourself disk space costs in the future (like, are managed Postgres services cheaper to host than on disk ones?), I'd recommend doing that.
Plot twist: Johan was a Nintendo eShop developer
I wonder why the world outside a limited subset of the Linux ecosystem is - at most - an afterthought for Fediverse developers.
I hate to break this to you, but OpenBSD is an antiquated OS masquerading as a modern one, and OpenBSD's lack of willingness to support modern standards results in the difficulty you're having.
OpenBSD feels like it's been duct taped together for decades. Anything "new" seems to just be, "sorry, not possible." The OpenBSD kernel doesn't support WiFi 5GHz. The OpenBSD kernel doesn't support even the minimum subset of isolation features in order for Docker to function properly. Why? Because OpenBSD refuses to add these features to their kernel. There are very likely other syscalls and basic features any given open source project needs, even if it's not being run in Docker, that simply do not exist under OpenBSD due to the very limited kernel it provides.
You're upset because open source projects don't support a platform that is old and developer-hostile. Turn your frustrations on OpenBSD - these projects would gladly support OpenBSD if they could.
My banking app whines at me that "your phone is rooted, use at your own risk," but otherwise it works fine. Every bank is different though.