

Well the problem with Lemmy is that it doesn’t have clamfacts, so you need mastodon too.


Well the problem with Lemmy is that it doesn’t have clamfacts, so you need mastodon too.


Or !inhabitedbeauty@piefed.social maybe?


I heard they are investing into moonshot projects.


Kagi user since 2022, according to my account. I’ll admit that I rarely ever cross-check with other search engines. I like their assistants too (they are basically re-selling access to all big LLMs in their Ultimate tier). But you don’t really need those, what keeps me there are the good search results. (And the ability to easily block/raise whole domains on the results.)
Some months ago walking got suddenly painful in the lower back. Walking down a stair was only possible at half the normal speed. I am fourty-something and this made me feel very old. I did more of my usual back-strengthening exercises, but it got worse. I thought surely something is broken. When I went to the doctor she told me that I just neglected stretching, mostly the hip flexor. It went away after doing that. Apparently very common when you sit a lot, and when you do lots of running. (And I did try more running to make it go away, without stretching afterwards, lol.)


Also in Europe. I’ve heard about Grenoble (France), but there seem to be more now. Check out adfreecities.org.uk too. Most don’t seem to ban 100% of all ads, but close enough for me.
Maybe people who are used to this will become less tolerant of online ads, too.
If I’m clearly not understanding a key concept in biology
Yes, you’re misunderstanding the concept of death. Death is bad only from the individual’s point of view. It’s how life renews itself, making room for change. Nothing wrong with trying to reduce suffering, of course, but immortality clearly falls into the “nefarious reasons” category. It’s what happens when you focus too much on the individual’s perspective of life. If you want to study biology you have to consider death from a different angle.
Try Libera Chat if you like the free/libre software community. About 30’000 users connected right now.
If you’re running the latest Debian (or even the stable one), IRC is still a good place to go for support. And there is an electronics channel on Libera that was still big last time I checked. If you don’t know which IC to use for your project someone there will probably know. I would stick around there if I were still into electronics.
Also, IRC is just more relaxing by being text-only. No flashy avatars, pictures, reactions, and for most parts no gamification.
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I’ve read it too, and this is a perfect summary. (The book is relatively long and the topic is complex, not an easy read.)


Since you are already on Mastodon, I would start by checking out the instances of people you have interacted with. Many topic-instances are still pretty general-purpose. Decentralize yourself! Join two or three instances. Subscribe to different topics on each. See what sticks.
On a small instance, the local feed is much more important. Local users have a larger influence on what you discover. So, check the local feed first. It may be a bit boring but should be free of spam. Check the external feed. It should not be too tacky, and have a CW where you want one. Check the moderation policy. If you want to commit to only one small instance, find out who pays the hosting and maybe donate.
Are you this person who, at the family gathering, will loudly decline words in a long dead language they forced you to learn 50 years ago, just to call it useful?