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I thought FAQs were always just made up.
I like computers, trains, space, radio-related everything and a bunch of other tech related stuff. User of GNU+Linux.
I am also dumb and worthless.
My laptop is HP 255 G7 running Manjaro and Linux Mint.
I own RTL-SDRv3 and RSP1 clone.
SDF Unix shell username: user224
this space intentionally left blank while we wait for people to frequently ask questions
I thought FAQs were always just made up.
I also like the idea of ptunnel
Ptunnel is an application that allows you to reliably tunnel TCP connections to a remote host using ICMP echo request and reply packets, commonly known as ping requests and replies.
Based on this Chromebooks can run Firefox flatpaks.
I am 35, you’re classified
The Lemmy energy is strong here.
With LemmyUI that also applies to videos and audio. With images, you can put them inside a link text field to get a button.
CyberTruck X(ylem).
I think there might be some unaddressed confusion here. I see you mention “lemmy world”, however that is just one instance running Lemmy software. It is open-source, so maybe somebody could fork it, but I don’t think it’s something to ask from lemmy.world. Maybe from the official Lemmy devs, but do keep in mind they’re just volunteers.
As for posting on your profile, that’s something for the side of micro-blogging. Standalone, that could be Mastodon in the Fediverse. But there’s also MBin (active KBin fork) which is compatible with Mastodon.
Perhaps it would better fit MBin.
If integrate Lemmy with something, that should be Mastodon first.
Kbin/Mbin show votes too.
Edit: But I think downvotes are hidden by default now.
Voting is more akin to signing the guestbook.
Meh, that’s rather just “I was here” or “I read this”. Voting is more like “I liked/disliked this book”.
I don’t know, you’ll have to check yourself. Multiple addresses yes, though, 10 of them.
They also have mail-only tier at 4.99.
Longer lived Gen Z will likely be able to see the turn of the 22nd century, after all.
But will there be anything to see left?
What about this one?:
Not everyone knows everything. Actually, nobody does.
Computers simply became an easily available necessity, thus you get a lot of computer-illiterate people using computers.