‘Christmas Is Our Day’: NBA Delivers Emphatic Statement Versus NFL
‘Christmas Is Our Day’: NBA Delivers Emphatic Statement Versus NFL
Recently, the National Football League decided to go head-to-head with the National Basketball Association on Christmas Day. It's become a sports turf war of sorts.Forbes
Border czar Tom Homan says children of illegal immigrants could be put in halfway homes
cross-posted from: thelemmy.club/post/20663826
Tom Homan, the incoming border czar, on Thursday floated the idea of having the children of migrants in halfway homes as part of a mass deportation plan.
Border czar Tom Homan says children of illegal immigrants could be put in halfway homes
Tom Homan, the incoming border czar, on Thursday floated the idea of having the children of migrants in halfway homes as part of a mass deportation plan.
Why is gnome not so sharp like macOS?
Would it be possible to have a linux DE with that high quality like macOS? The last 3 years i did a lot of distro hopping. Im really Happy with gnome and ubuntu now ( reason was the rocm Installation script for my 7900xtx). Currently i donate whenever i use a Software more frequent. So i also would pay for a such good Look like on an iMac from my wife. Currently i use 4k Resolution and coloring settings with my spyder color camera.
Edit: Im talking about sharpness of font rendering
Final Edit:
I switched from ubuntu to cachy os with native KDE: The soltuion is really nice so thanks for the community feedback!
Även Fediversum har startpaket - Svenssons Nyheter
Även Fediversum har startpaket. Bluesky är lätt att använda. Det ser exakt likadant ut som X (Twitter) och för användaren fungerar det i princip exakt likadant. Men en del funktioner är annorlunda eller finns inte alls på X.
Adjusting screen resolution/font/icon size for a new user
As per the title, I have a newcomer into linux that handed me a laptop to install with a recommended distro.
Being a user very much used to windows, I opted to install Lnx Mint, considering this person may also want to game a little bit in the future.
Install went flawlessly but the screen resolution is so high the fonts and desktop icons were so small it made difficult to read the icons text.
I tried to tweak the icons and fonts to usuable size but the overall feel of the desktop is still... stretched, for lack of a better word.
The laptop is a mistery brand, running a full Intel machine. And I say mistery because when I took a look into windows, the touchpad was identified as a Lenovo, but the machine is just an unbranded generic one.
Hardware profile
- Intel Core i3-500SU
- 8GB RAM
- Intel HD Graphics 5500 (BDW GT2), 1920x1080 max resolution, on 14.2 inch screen
Any suggestions on how to solve the issue?
ESPN Teases Vision for Its Biggest Bet: 2025’s ‘Flagship’ Platform - Front Office Sports
After setting gaudy expectations for ESPN’s forthcoming direct-to-consumer service, the network is now making that case to the public.
i have a question about fediverse of lemmy lemmy posts
like this
Looking back on 2024: WSJ reporter Evan Gershkovich returns home after grueling imprisonment in Russia
cross-posted from: thelemmy.club/post/20651803
One of the biggest media stories of 2024 was a celebratory one: Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich was freed from Russia in a complex prisoner swap.
Looking back on 2024: WSJ reporter Evan Gershkovich returns home after grueling imprisonment in Russia
One of the biggest media stories of 2024 was a celebratory one: Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich was freed from Russia in a complex prisoner swap.
What the Rumble-Tether Alliance Signals for Subverting Big Tech’s Dominance
A bold partnership aims to reshape media, finance, and content creation with decentralized solutions.
https://reclaimthenet.org/rumble-tether-775m-investment-free-speech-global-expansion
poVoq
in reply to adrianhooves • • •like this
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adrianhooves
in reply to poVoq • • •like this
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realcaseyrollins
in reply to poVoq • • •m_f
in reply to realcaseyrollins • • •like this
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realcaseyrollins
in reply to m_f • • •Jumuta
in reply to m_f • • •AbouBenAdhem
in reply to adrianhooves • • •As another commenter has said, this is likely just a feature of the interface and not a reflection of what other users see.
But you should keep in mind that, due to the nature of federation, your posts are copied to all other instances that are federated with yours—which in theory includes not just lemmy instances but any software implementing the ActivityPub protocol. Whether those instances actually remove posts you’ve marked as deleted is up to their discretion.
adrianhooves
in reply to AbouBenAdhem • • •AbouBenAdhem
in reply to adrianhooves • • •I believe that an out-of-the-box lemmy instance will remove deleted content from federated instances automatically.
My point is just that site maintainers can modify the software to do whatever they want, or run software that implements ActivityPub but whose functionality is completely different from that of lemmy.
sith
in reply to AbouBenAdhem • • •Serinus
in reply to sith • • •You're asking for changes to software to prevent changes to software. The whole point of this thread is that server owners can make whatever software changes they like.
By default things get deleted. Don't count on that for any platform. Once together put something out on the public Internet, there's never a guarantee it'll go away. No matter what anyone does, I can always take my phone out and take a picture of what you've posted before you delete it.
sith
in reply to Serinus • • •m-p{3}
in reply to sith • • •It's not a setting that available to admins out of the box, and someone tweaking their instance not to process the request for deletion from the ActivityPub protocol can't really be detected from the outside, and sure won't be published.
Once it's out there in the fediverse, you can assume it's there to stay.
sith
in reply to m-p{3} • • •Yes, but it is still preferable to have this behavior. Just as I think it's preferable to have "please do not track", even though it's being removed now. See my other reply. 99% will use the reference implement unless it sucks.
You should still warn users that what you post on the internet probably stays on the internet. Somewhere.
Kichae
in reply to sith • • •It's not a community setting or feature. It's a fact of the internet.
If you publish something to someone else's website, you no longer have any control over it. And federation means publishing your content on thousands of websites, many of them not even running the same software. Your comments are out there on mbin sites, Friendica sites, Hubzilla sites, Mastodon sites, Misskey sites, and many others. Someone's pribably got a custom web server they developed, slapped some ActivityPub inside of it, and didn't bother to make it even understand delete requests.
This is the internet. It is public, and it is forever. You really need to treat it as such.
sith
in reply to Kichae • • •Yes, but all that is true for Facebook, Reddit and whatever. It's still nice to have this feature in the "reference" implementation of Lemmy. I think. Then it will also be easier for instance owners and moderators to follow any local laws that requires this.
I don't know if this is already in the ActivityPub protocol, but it would be nice if all instances who has a copy of some content, deletes it, if it has been marked "request for deletion" by the creator or the owner of the instance where it was first posted. There will always be actors that store specifically all posts that's been marked for delete, but I still think this is preferable.
Serinus
in reply to sith • • •That's the way it is. That's what this meant.
🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
in reply to adrianhooves • • •Because it takes a bit for the request to delete to get sent to every single instance that might have duplicated the post. It then takes time for the post to be deleted, assuming the instances that receive the request to delete follow the request. Also YOU yourself will still see the content because you will have the option to restore it if you didn't intend to delete it.
Same for when you post. I've noticed about an average of about 20 minutes before my posts are visible on other instances.
In the future, I would recommend assuming that anything you post to Lemmy or any other website/social media will be up there forever because once it's out in the open, it may be entirely impossible to remove every single instance of that post from every single thing that copied it. The server may be malicious itself and not honor any deletion requests, as well as users who may have seen the post archived it themselves.
Draconic NEO
in reply to adrianhooves • • •