Jaluvshuskies

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Ori and the Blind Forest + Ori and the Will of the Wisps. So much can be said

Zelda Ocarina of Time. I was growing up when it came out and I was so little I couldnt' really play it yet, so I watched my big brother play it. Whenever he let me try, I woudl just run around on Epona around Hyrule Field in circles lol

Control, just so much fun

MMOs: Vindictus, BDO, and Lost Ark. Just with playing them for 2+ years ea, that creates a lot of fun and happy memories with the people I played with

 

So...trying to find this information is hard when reddit is down / there's an ongoing blackout lmao

I saw a meme about this and I'm curious about what he moderated. I'm pretty sure I can say his name, but just in case I can't for rules

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

One of my favorite parts about reddit is people will always be there to call out your BS, whether it be via downvotes or a comment. I always appreciated that because more times than not, they will tell them they're wrong and explain why, sometimes even with sources. A lot of the time, they redirect people to better sources of information, like a telegram group about a custom android rom

Of course, this isn't true 100% of the time, not even downvoted comment is wrong - like the other person commented, it's fair to take it with a grain of salt

That's why my solution for this is to research a topic EXTENSIVELY by reading tons of threads and comments about it, put them all together in my head and consider them all, and then decide on the best outcome/answer based on all the research combined. That way, I don't just rely on 1 person's response and hope they're right. For most things though, them being wrong might not even make a huge negative impact

I've found that Redditors also generally have our backs - they warn us about stuff to do or not to do, that companies don't warn us about because it would otherwise profit them

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

I've been on the fence about wiping my account as well. It's just hard for me - my history, wholesome interaction with users, friends made, how many people I've helped, I've written a few guides. Man it just sucks. (the largest guide I've written, for Vindictus, is partially outdated, but also I put in sooooooo much effort into it and I'm really proud of it. maybe I'll download and save as a .doc or something)

I think I just need to hear someone's stance on it, hear their points, and be persuaded

I also need to figure out -when- to do that if I end up doing it. I assume before the 30th, but I'm not sure if some have started doing it already, and why

2
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I wasn't sure where else to post this, since well, reddit is down and also in the middle of a blackout that I'm participating in. I did a quick google search "firefox nightly down" but nothing useful popped up. crazy how inefficient information searching becomes when you can't use reddit lol

I'm getting these crashes on 2 devices - my OnePlus 8T (Nameless13) and my Surface Duo 1 (Android 12). I was using both fine earlier this morning, went for a walk, and I can't open either.

Sometimes it immediately closes when I try to open, and sometimes I get the actual "Firefox Nightly keeps stopping" crash

Anyone experiencing the same thing or have any idea what's going on? I have no idea where else to look. I checked the app store reviews & sorted by most recent, but didn't see any bad review about it not working except for 1 yesterday

Edit: I just installed normal Firefox app and it launches fine. Also same issue whether on wifi or data

Edit 2: Still happening, and got an error trying to copy the crash url

Edit 3, a week later: All fixed, a few days after I reported this it fixed on its own :) sorry for those I didn't see your comment on

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Yeah, a lot of people to seem very open minded about Lemmy. I really hope it sticks through because I absolutely love the redditor community in general. A lot of like-minded techies, that are also in my generation (I'm a early millennial that grew up with late millennials) so a lot of interests and humor are shared :) I definitely agree with it needing to take a little getting used to, I hope more people share that mentality and give it a very fair chance

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

It seems comfy. I'm skeptical of the UI and UX for the website and the app (even jeroba) but I came from reddit boost which is absolutely a phenomenal experience. I hope this evolves and improves in these ways

Community feels more welcoming. I hope it continues to grow exponentially, because it'll need it to work!

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (3 children)

me too man, me too. such a warming feeling. fuck spez. I think it's amazing we're all coming together against this

I look forward to what else the community and developers will do while saying "no"

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I do as well. At least the threads I've read through, most of the time reddit was pretty good about downvoting the shit out of a comment that has misinformation or the user is being a dbag (racist, sexist, unnecessarily negative, etc) which was one of my favorite things. I could always count on users to call out those types of comments. It made searching for answers and information so easy and also amusing

Sometimes I would run across a comment that just downvoted purely for their opinion, which was one of the problems it had, but in my opinion (10+ years on reddit), it doesn't seem nearly as often as people claim

To answer the thread: I like it, I use Jeroba for Android but I'm a long time user of reddit boost which I think is way ahead. I'm not a fan of the website yet but I just think it's a little confusing