Best bet is to check out the GitHub repo
Best bet is to check out the GitHub repo
That’s exactly what is happening now. Lemmy is a very young codebase and up until very recently only had a tiny user base, so optimisation wasn’t that important.
Over the last few months the Devs have been working hard to improve things, but there is a lot of ground to cover
Possibly not ideal for you as a data engineer, but you could try skimming down the GitHub database issues?
No idea what your situation is, but mine takes 30 seconds to charge and has enough range to cover my daily commute for a week.
Just to add to this.
This is because the authentication tokens that your browser uses are stored in cookies, these match up with entries in the database.
As a way to mitigate the hack, admins deleted the entries in the database rendering the tokens in cookies useless.
This means that any tokens the hacker got access to are also useless.
Haptics are possible if you aren’t using iOS. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Navigator/vibrate
I think the issue the Twitter migration had was is very dependent on people with large followings moving, but they are obviously some of the least likely to move for the same reason.
It’s far easier for reddit > fediverse because you just need people willing to post links and have discussions.
I can only assume it’s because they are stupid…
The only live bird my cat has managed to bring home has been a pigeon, all other birds were dead and mostly chicks.
I came home to find the pigeon wondering around my living room and the cat outside… Thanks cat…
I have no insight into why it’s being done in this instance, but object storage is typically used when you want to move away from storing things on your web server with “fixed” storage, and instead store it in an “infinitely” expandable storage system. It is also much easier to manage when you have multiple servers as it’s separate and shared.