Unfortunately many tech questions are on that site which help many people. I wish that lemmy becomes the primary source for tech questions and solutions.
Reddit wasn't a primary source at one point, it's going to take time. Also, brave pulls top replies to questions, so you don't have to go to reddit itself(though that might use API.
I wish that lemmy becomes the primary source for tech questions and solutions.
I wish that those tech solutions get tidied/filtered/cleaned (by removing the noise) and moved to some sort of wiki, or "information plaza".
Don't get me wrong, I like Lemmy; but I don't think that forums are a good long-term storage for practical info. The very fact that people were relying on Reddit for that was already a symptom of something in this regard missing.
Uuuuuuuuuu, that's genius, you could brick any website like that that you want to stop using. I'm going to post this in a productivity community without crediting you! (I'm not going to do that, do you want credit?)
This was obviously a consulting service. I charge by the word. Each word is USD 41.38 + tax. After my sales assistant received the payment you can reuse the advice as often as you like.
Took me a good two weeks(I deleted my account a day before the blackout after I recorded all the saved stuff on my account), but I finally stopped typing it absent mindedly.
I've noticed a large portion of the posts in Lemmy are haphazardly cropped into squares, is a Lemmy reader app in particular that does that to submitted images?