It comes down to bridging. I use discord and slack via IRC bridges. I actually use slack a lot (for work), but primarily through irslackd. I do not use slack for anything outside of work and would prefer to keep it that way.
For discord, I primarily use it through bitlbee-discord. With this bridge/gateway, I can actually chat on different servers at the same time, so I wouldn't mind this for different communities if I had to.
Matrix is last because I don't really have a good briding solution for it and it just seems clunkier than the other two for me.
I would be less willing to contribute/participate in discussions if newer platforms such as discord, slack, or matrix are used. Of those three, I would prefer discord, then slack, then matrix.
As it is, I only use Slack for work, and mostly avoid discord and matrix except for a few mostly dead channels/servers.
I understand that this is not the mainstream view and that most people prefer the newer platforms, but personally, I am not a fan of them nor do I use them.
I'm fine with IRC (actually prefer it as I use it all the time).
I agree with others that a mailing list is more intimidating and more of a hassle, but if there is a web archive, I can live with that. It wouldn't be my preference, but it wouldn't be an insurmountable barrier (I have contributed to Alpine Linux in the past via their mailing list workflow).
Familiarity (my client distro is Pop and is based on Ubuntu), and I like the LTS life cycle (predictable).
I do uninstall snaps, though, and mostly just use Docker for things. I could use Debian, but again, for me it was about familiarity and support (a lot more Ubuntu specific documentation).
You can escape the :
URLS = https\://foo.example.com
URLS += https\://bar.example.com
URLS += https\://www.example.org
Do you have a searxng
folder in the same folder as your docker-compose.yml
? If so, perhaps it is not mounting inside the container properly.
I think this is missing an article link: https://www.phoronix.com/review/downfall
Downfall, or as Intel prefers to call it is GDS: Gather Data Sampling. GDS/Downfall affects the gather instruction with AVX2 and AVX-512 enabled processors. At least the latest-generation Intel CPUs are not affected but Tigerlake / Ice Lake back to Sandy Bridge is confirmed to be impacted. There is microcode mitigation available but it will be costly for AVX2/AVX-512 workloads with GATHER instructions in hot code-paths and thus widespread software exposure particularly for HPC and other compute-intensive workloads that have relied on AVX2/AVX-512 for better performance.
Rough day for CPU makers…
Update: Of course there is a dedicated page for it: https://downfall.page/
No, but basically jmp.chat takes over your phone number… it acts as your carrier for voice and SMS (similar to Google Voice). Maybe not exactly what you want.
From the FAQ:
You can use JMP to communicate with your contacts without them changing anything on their end, just like with any other telephone provider. JMP works wherever you have an Internet connection. JMP can be used alongside, or instead of, a traditional wireless carrier subscription.
The benefit of this is that you can receive voice and text on anything that can serve as a XMPP client.
You could consider using something like jmp.chat. It delivers SMS via XMPP (aka jabber), so you could self-host a XMPP server and receive SMS that way. It also has some support for MMS (group chat, media), but my experience with it was mixed (I used it for about 3-4 years).
I have a similar setup (external USB drive that I periodically plugin to backup stuff), and I use rsnapshot which is based on the venerable rsync
utility. It is a command line solution that I’ve used for many years and it allows you to do daily, weekly, or even monthly backups.
I also use rsnapshot for handling remote backups as well, so it is pretty versatile.
Indeed… :|
This looks incredibly cool and fun. Would be interested trying to re-write some of the games myself when I have some free time.
Also joined the club today :)
Could be what communities you are subscribed to. I run a small instance with about 3ish users, and here are my stats after about 3 months as well:
What version of lemmy are you using? A recent update also introduced some space savings in the database (I think).