fajre

joined 1 day ago
 

Hey everyone, I’m trying to explore PeerTube, but I noticed that the official instance list (https://instances.joinpeertube.org/) doesn’t allow filtering by number of users or amount of content.

Does anyone know which are the largest instances in terms of users and content?

Thanks!

[–] fajre@lemmy.world 4 points 6 hours ago (1 children)

That is kind of awesome.

I wish Debian’s default Grub theme was less ugly; I know I could change it (and I have on other installs, but I’m quite lazy about theming these days. Part of it is I have a laptop that I rely on for college and don’t want to risk any theme glitches, so I keep its Debian install as vanilla as possible.

The first time I tried doing it (alone, without watching the video), I broke the system ;(, had a boot problem, so I had to reinstall everything again.

208
My grub theme (lemmy.world)
 

The background (versions) and the yellow text change with each reboot :D

https://github.com/Lxtharia/minegrub-theme https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vgeouYCwGI4

[–] fajre@lemmy.world 6 points 9 hours ago

Yes, codeberg, and it’s going to be decentralized soon when forgejo implements federation

amazing!

[–] fajre@lemmy.world 2 points 9 hours ago

Lmao, exactly me!

[–] fajre@lemmy.world 3 points 9 hours ago

@fajre @Codeberg ist “a non-profit, community-led organization that helps free and open source projects prosper. Our services include Git hosting (using @forgejo ), Weblate, Woodpecker CI and Pages.”

interesting man, i'll try!

[–] fajre@lemmy.world 5 points 9 hours ago (1 children)

OMG, I didn’t know this site, thanks man!

[–] fajre@lemmy.world 1 points 9 hours ago

“Its not filled with wankers and bots yet though so its got that going for it.”

hahaha I use Arch, btw

[–] fajre@lemmy.world 2 points 9 hours ago

Before anything, I would check if there is an active community they are actually interested in, and give them that. Otherwise, there’s really not much reason why they should use it. It would be like gifting someone a box full of manga to someone who is not interested in Japanese stuff. I’m saying this because a lot of people including OP seems to think decentralisation/federation/FOSSness are some major selling points to a lot of people, but it really isn’t. Content usually is.

It even applies to you too. If an instance banned you for mentioning Linux or FOSS, you wouldn’t really care that they were running open-source Lemmy, you would ditch that instance. If that happened with every instance, you wouldn’t use Lemmy at all.

Now you made me think man!

[–] fajre@lemmy.world 1 points 9 hours ago

I normally just say, “I read [x] on Lemmy.”

If they ask and are genuinely curious what that is, I tell them it’s like a reddit offshoot, but the users control the network and servers with a high level of transparency in administration/moderation and run off software that can have tens of thousands of crowdsourced eyes helping to find and fix any bug or security issue.

interesting!

[–] fajre@lemmy.world 2 points 10 hours ago

I don’t, because they’ll ruin it.

lmao

[–] fajre@lemmy.world 4 points 10 hours ago

Brave has already had several leaks and a history of selling data, that’s why I switched to LibreWolf.

[–] fajre@lemmy.world 4 points 10 hours ago

No, because the people hiring and the people working with you will be using GitHub.

maybe not! Life isn’t just work.

[–] fajre@lemmy.world 1 points 10 hours ago
 

Guys, when you talk about the Fediverse to friends, family, or colleagues, how do you explain it?

Do you call it a “decentralized social network,” an “alternative to big tech,” or “a collection of open-source networks”? And how do you convince someone to create an account on Mastodon, Lemmy, Pixelfed, etc., without them getting scared by technical terms like instance, federated, or peer-to-peer?

I’m asking because my so-called friends don’t believe me and even call me crazy when I talk about this “nonsense.”

The future is open source, decentralized, and federated!

 

Guys, when you talk about the Fediverse to friends, family, or colleagues, how do you explain it?

Do you call it a “decentralized social network,” an “alternative to big tech,” or “a collection of open-source networks”? And how do you convince someone to create an account on Mastodon, Lemmy, Pixelfed, etc., without them getting scared by technical terms like instance, federated, or peer-to-peer?

I’m asking because my so-called friends don’t believe me and even call me crazy when I talk about this “nonsense.”

The future is open source, decentralized, and federated!

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