I am pretty sure I read somewhere someone running something like Aneko made in the Godot engine running on Wayland. You should be fine, I think.
edit: seems like it will run, but won’t follow the cursor: https://github.com/tie/oneko/issues/10
I am pretty sure I read somewhere someone running something like Aneko made in the Godot engine running on Wayland. You should be fine, I think.
edit: seems like it will run, but won’t follow the cursor: https://github.com/tie/oneko/issues/10
Honestly, I just want to use whatever most of the native KDE Plasma apps use, and that mainly seems to be Qt. The other UI frameworks weren’t as good or reliable afaik. Now that you mentioned Slint, I took a look at it, and it seems pretty solid.
Seems like Slint can use the Qt renderer: https://docs.slint.dev/latest/docs/slint/guide/backends-and-renderers/backends_and_renderers/#qt-renderer
I will check out Slint. Thank you.
No, not any I know of. Tagging is also commonly called mentioning here.
edit: Oh, I think I know what they mean. It’s the labels or badges you can put on people, I think. But that is not a native Lemmy feature. Thunder and Summit have them, for example.
OP should make clear whether they mean mentioning/tagging or labeling people in apps.
I do, only rarely.
Your tag would be @OmegaLemmy@discuss.online
That’s polkit.
I never tweaked it before, so I’ll just leave you with a link to its Arch wiki page: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Polkit
At least not an operating system like a certain “text editor”.
Running an actively used Peertube instance is a lot more expensive than, for example, a Lemmy instance. Videos take up a lot more storage than text. Not only that, the videos also need to be processed and then served. Who will keep paying for the monthly server bills?
Then there’s monetization. Most YouTube creators are there because they make a living out of YouTube. There is no such thing on PeerTube. They would need to solely rely on donations.
The ideal PeerTube network would be where every somewhat big content creator ran their own instance and maybe a few general instances for smaller content creators that are regularly donated to.
If YouTube ever gets killed by Google, don’t expect many people to come here.
Are you the owner of the fediverse report? If so, can you update the link for FediDB? It seems like they moved to fedidb.com. And also, I’m not sure if it’s only me, but new.fedidb.org does not exist for me.
LW is bigger than it should be. Direct them to some other instance.
To get rid of it from your list, you’d have to be unassigned as a mod. I don’t think that’s possible if you’re the only mod in a community.
That is possible.
Are you using the package manager? If yes, try refreshing your mirrors.
When I first started out, I just browsed through the All feed, checked the Communities page and also found some new interesting ones from various communities. You also might want to check out https://lemmyverse.net/communities
That information is stored in the database of the instance you’re on. Note that this only affects the UI. It does nothing more than make blocked users invisible for you. They can fully interact with your posts, comments, view your profile, etc.
Hm, true. I guess site bans are simply not federated. You’ll have to look it up manually, for example when you can’t access any communities of that instance. You might want to ask about this and about the possibility of having site bans from remote instances federate in this community.
Check the modlog and filter by your user.
Yeah welcome but I hope you are aware that this is the !asklemmy@lemmy.ml community. Not for introductions. For that, we have !newtolemmy@lemmy.ca