I honestly kind of can't wait for the IPO, I just want to see what happens
Shlomito
I don't love the idea of a neutral vote, because it would necessitate you voting on each and every post for them to stop showing up on your feed, which is actually how the "hide read posts" seems to work right now, but without the neutral vote.
And fuck it, it may be a hot take here, but I don't dislike the idea of suggested posts showing up on your feed. It's a great way to find new communities you wouldn't have found otherwise, even if Reddit was a bit... heavy-handed in its approach
But yeah other than that your idea for showing the user the actual weights used for their suggestions algorithm does sound interesting, but I'm not sure how plausible it is (assuming many of these algorithms use machine learning and the weights are basically meaningless to humans)
New tetromino just dropped
Maybe you could use use site:lemmy.ml, because they federate with most instances, they're likely to have most of lemmy's content?
Nah those fucking 1%ers, they're ruining the country! /s
Welp, I guess I now have to buy a cat, and an axolotl, and a ferret, and a drawing pad, and a tumblr account, and a 360hz monitor, and a-
Yeah, except the volume button part, and only to go down
It was also a thing in the stock app. Actually, the fact that it was so fucking buggy was one of the things that made me go to infinity
I did, but mostly I just saw that the UI was different, and it had microblogging. So Kbin, practically speaking, is just Mastodon and Lemmy mixed into the same site, but on different tabs? That's all I'm getting. It calls communities 'magazines', but seeing as lemmy communities from other instances are treated as magazines, they're basically the same? Same with the 'tweets'?
Although it's still missing the button to go to the next top level comment
I still don't understand the difference between Lemmy and Kbin
Oh that's bad
A good chunk of those could've made accounts but not stayed long. And how do they get those numbers? Because there were many people who did accounts in more than one instance.