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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 7th, 2023

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  • Dessalines, right? I happen upon a lot of his Github issue threads on libraries that i use, which i think is interesting when i recognize the account. He seems normal there.

    Other than that, looking at his Lemmy profile, it seems he gets into a lot of political arguments on subjects that i don’t know much about - i can’t tell if he’s unjustly hateful towards any group. I have heard he bans people a lot over these disagreements, which isn’t cool so i think your sentiment is fair.

    Currently my only issue with .ml is the profanity filter but i don’t know anything about the other instances either. I imagine this conversation has been had a lot already but if i’m on Lemmy either way, what’s the difference in terms of support? If he’s a dick, i’d probably rather just switch to Kbin or PieFed




  • I don’t remember what it looked like before but it was just too much friction to be redirected to a day-7 update post that focuses on the changes to pre-established rules rather than how it works, from the beginning, as a whole.

    Just take the important part of your post:

    I will add a pixel on the image based on the comments (one per person). Every comment will be counted, as long as it tells a position and a colour (see below). Any conflicting pixels in a same post’s comments will be resolved by the highest upvote number.

    When commenting a pixel’s position, use the cartesian plane (X, Y) to indicate the pixel position and a HEX colour value (and maybe CSS colour names). For a reference, top left pixel is X-1, Y-1, and bottom right is X-32, Y-32.

    And make it the body of the following posts.

    Also, i suggest adding grid references to the edges so people don’t have to count pixels














  • They also disable many lights at night here in south Florida (but I’m sure it’s common everywhere in the U.S.) to where one road gets permanent flashing yellow and the other gets flashing red (stop sign).

    That’s interesting that they’re all positioned at the beginning of the intersections. That would take me some getting used to, but it’s probably safer since it forces you to stop further from the intersection to see the signal