Came here with this show in mind. Would recommend.
I’m just an internet explorer.
日本語 OK • 中文 OK • tiếng việt OK
@linguistics • @cats • @dogs • @learnjapanese • @japanese • @residentevil • @genshin_impact • @genshinimpact • @classicalmusic • @persona • @finalfantasy
Came here with this show in mind. Would recommend.
Good question. In the past, there have been some federation issues. However, things have seemed fine for awhile now. I will admit that it’s entirely possible that there are issues that I may not be aware of. I don’t do any extensive testing as I’m just a regular user, and /kbin is a younger platform which tries to do something different from lemmy and mastodon. If the Collections feature interests you, I might suggest just making a kbin account to give it a test run. You can essentially have the same feed you do now thanks to federation, but with the added benefit of feeds more suited to your interests. Public Collections are also very useful for discovering similar communities across the fediverse.
Deep Questions with Cal Newport
Learn Japanese with Masa-Sensei
kbin has this – the feature is called collections. https://kbin.social/magazines/collections
you can make public ones that others can follow, or private ones to make curated feeds for yourself.
Hehe yeah, I’d have to agree. Studio Ghibli films are really nice. I should probably give it a rewatch some time soon.
Kiki’s Delivery Service
To further add onto this, they can be public or private. Public Collections are able to be followed by other users. This would be helpful for increasing discoverability for fellow users and communities/magazines. You can create Private Collections for personalized feeds that you may not want to share, negating the need to create a new account for feeds with a different theme or purpose.
On /kbin, there is a feature called Collections – you can group similar communities akin to multireddits. These collections can be public or private, and don’t need to have an overarching theme. Public collections are pretty handy for discoverability too.
It sounds like you’ve taken the appropriate precautions. I’m sure others will have better suggestions, but perhaps you can try running a VM for a week or so as if you’ve made the switch and take note of anything you feel you may be lacking.
Pokemon FireRed–I’m playing it in Japanese to work on my reading and speaking
EndeavourOS. I like having a relatively bloat-free setup. It’s also been nice because it’s been easy to manage so far.
If you receive these notifications on mobile, you can use kdeconnect (gsconnect on GNOME) which sends pop up notifications on your desktop from your phone, as a workaround.
This is awesome, OP. I’ve crossposted this to @linguistics to give you a little more visibility. Cheers.
My advice would be to take things gradually. This endeavor can be a bit overwhelming if you’re one to hyperfixate.
This is not the emoji you’re looking for hand wave
Haven’t needed to do either yet since I started using #EndeavourOS. I’m a bit surprised, given how many posts I’ve seen about people bricking their Arch installs.
Vouching for Endeavour–I’ve been using it for the past few weeks and it’s been great. I have an AMD gpu though.
https://github.com/refact0r/sidefox ?