A lot of people, but a motherboard more bots.
A lot of people, but a motherboard more bots.
Coffee doesn’t automatically come with sugar, so… Obviously no? What rhetorical point are you even trying to make?
Without explaining the actual problems you have with Firefox on Android, your post is really pointless.
Also, “steadily approaching zero” is an intelligent an analysis as saying Edge is steadily approaching 100% just because its share is increasing.
Mozilla Suite, the thing discontinued seventeen years ago!?
This is not stated accurately. The American versions of pizza and carbonara we’re invented in the US, but there were and are original Italian versions.
This has come up as part of those requests to migrate accounts between instances. “I want a persona that stays with me for years”… Is that actually a good idea though!?
Do you know why its Google Play rating is so abysmal? Everyone seems furious about some redesign, but lemmy loves it.
That seems to add a single point of failure for some key functionality. And who owns that server? Can they be bought out by Meta pretending to be a good citizen?
So many sites don’t even provide RSS anymore. It used to come enabled out of the box for every content management system, now only in the large old ones like Drupal.
Especially Amazon’s web hosting infrastructure. It would take down so much of the web, the government would intervene.
I have this too, made worse in Jerboa where it won’t even remember my filter settings so I have to go to All and New every time to see anything.
Edit: oops, found you could change the defaults in Jerboa settings. Still shouldn’t need to, it should just remember last choice, but at least it’s possible.
This would be especially great if apps like Jerboa allowed automating the grouping process (opt in by user maybe). Some sort of maintained lists of equivalent communities across instances, so the app can easily allow you to subscribe to one community or, in a more Reddity way, a federated set of communities with one tap.
Your post is pretty nonsensical anyway, but if anything more people had their own websites as a proportion of the web, with Geocities and Angelfire etc. This was before social media, so to have a presence on the web you had to have your own site, and people did.