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submitted 1 year ago by teflocarbon@lemmy.world to c/memmy@lemmy.ml

Hey everyone, not sure if you know me but I'm the one who did the UI/UX redesign for Memmy. I hope that you're all enjoying the redesign and that it's helped you settle in nice and cosy.

We've had several questions asked about mod tools and when they're coming. We definitely know this is an important feature but we have one major problem. None of us are moderators.

I've been going back and forth on designs on what I think a good interface would look like but my mission is futile since I don't really know how the flow of it should feel, which is paramount to good UX.

That's where you come in. I need ideas on what you want to see, how your moderation flow works or what would work best for you. Is there a certain feature that you just can't live without or a way of moderation that is practically engraved in your DNA? I want to hear about it.

Unfortunately, I'm limited by the somewhat limited number of tools that Lemmy provides. But I can work on making sure using those tools feel seamless.

I'm looking for feedback on these things.

  • How should you access these tools? Should it be always active on communities you moderate, be able to be toggled? When you're in a post, how do you want to use them?
  • I'm considering a moderation centre at the moment. What would you like it to contain?
  • What are the most important things to you? How should they be displayed and in what order by importance?

These are just a few ideas of course, I'm always open to feedback. You can find me on here or at our Discord server at https://discord.gg/guKywNycrY

I'm looking forward to hearing what you have to say on this so I can get to work instead of procrastinating on maritime history videos.

[-] teflocarbon@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

How can someone put this up on a wall without noticing that Greenland has been annexed by Canada, Texas has annexed Canada and the Mediterranean has moved to India.

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For me it feels like a much smaller update, which has been rumoured for awhile. Sort of like iOS 11 or OS X Snow Leopard.

It's been running very well for me so far, even macOS Sonoma, even though macOS betas are notorious for breaking things and causing fires, this one has worked perfectly for me so far.

iOS 17 has ran very well too, with the exception of a few of the new features causing the occasional respring but nothing major. Battery life has been fine and my phone is cool so that's got to count for something right? From a core functionality perspective I'd say that it's very stable, maybe even more so than 16.5? I did get some weird resprings on 16.5 towards the end which I haven't had on stable for a long time.

Curious to hear your thoughts on it.

[-] teflocarbon@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I actually went to go and hunt down the sound and it turns out that I sent it to a friend. I mentioned that the last part sounded like a tyre screeching but they believed it was too consistent to be a tyre screeching. A few others that I asked had the same opinion of that. One thing that I can think of that has a very consistent screeching noise from a long distance is probably a train slamming on its brakes? Although it came from a direction where there isn't any trains running at that time.

https://www.whyp.it/tracks/104097/screaming-ish-sound?token=AWqwT Have a listen for yourself and see if you can deduce it.

[-] teflocarbon@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

It’s in Australia so it’s quite possible that someone found a spider. I’m pretty sure a murder would’ve appeared in the news around here so that’s mystery solved. I hope.

[-] teflocarbon@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I haven't had anything creepy happen to me personally that I can recall, but I do have something that did terrify me for a bit.

This was around a year ago but I was in the bathroom washing my hands after using the bathroom, this was very late at night, about 2:00am. That's when I heard some sort of noise that caught my interest. I was wearing noise-cancelling headphones so I was surprised that I heard this. I took them off and heard nothing afterwards, so I just chalked it up to my mind playing tricks and went back to my bedroom.

However, the sound did sit with me. It's one of those sounds that is engraved in your intuition. So I went to check the camera footage around the time that I heard the sound. I went back a couple of minutes and played back the footage, waiting to hear anything. After going through a few minutes, I was ready to give up on it, since it was just wind noise and distant traffic. That's when I heard this absolutely most long horrific blood curdling scream that I have ever heard in my life. It sounded like a woman and it genuinely made me freeze for a good few seconds.

I was in absolute shock and didn't know what to do about it. I sent it to the local police station and they said they'll investigate to see if anything came up around that time. I checked the news for a few days after in the local area and nothing about a murder or domestic violence incident came up. This area is usually pretty safe, so it was definitely a shock.

[-] teflocarbon@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Looking at it from the view of Reddit, their original excuse for charging for API access was due to the usage of it for machine learning with training their models. LLM's (Large Language Models), such as LaMDA (Bard, Google), GPT-4 (OpenAI), need an enormous amount of data inputted into them and Reddit has a large amount of high quality conversations, making it an invaluable source for them.

However, because Reddit's API was free, they didn't get a cent of this. Unsurprisingly, they didn't like this and wanted to profit off of this in some way. So they decided to charge for the API data access.

However, there is a clear issue with this as the Reddit API was used by third party apps, that don't abuse the API and use it to operate their Reddit clients.

It's quite clear now that the intention was not purely based on LLM's as there was a large number of solutions that Reddit could've used to charge for API access for those wanting the data and those who are simply operating third party apps.

  • They could've made a system where app developers can apply for a specialised API key to be used for third party apps.
  • They could've made different pricing tiers for those who are operating third party applications with adjusted rate-limits for mass-scraping compared to generalised browsing.
  • They could've allowed third party apps to have their users use their own API key that they get from Reddit themselves.
  • They could've worked with developers to add advertisements for their apps unless a premium subscription was purchased from the developer.
  • Many, many other ways they could've handled it other than this living PR nightmare.

Client developers were absolutely more than willing to discuss these options, yet they were thrown a ton of hurdles by reddit.

So why do they want you to use their app?

  • They get engagement data, since your usage can be completely tracked by them when using the app, such as how long you're looking at posts for, your engagement with specific topics, etc.
  • They can show you advertisements, this is their primary source of revenue.
  • They can promote their other revenue schemes, like purchasing coins and NFTs.
  • They can wall parts of the app off, like preventing you from downloading videos and forcing you to share the link to reddit, thereby creating engagement.
  • They can show investors the number of app downloads and their apps growth. This also makes it more likely that they get promoted in the various app stores. They probably get disdain every time they see Apollo being promoted many times by Apple, even in WWDC presentations, over their main app.

These are a few examples of reasons that Reddit want you to use their app and there are most certainly many more. However, their argument has a fatal flaw, in that the value of Reddit does not come from their platform, but it comes from the data within it.

Social media follows this rule usually, 90% are lurkers and 10% are contributors. However, it depends. You might have a 1% of contributors that are prolific contributors that produce most of the sites content, or you might have a very small portion of contributors, like 0.01%. Think of the number of YouTube users and how many actually post videos themselves, or even contribute to the comment section.

Reddit contributors will be more likely than the average lurker to use a third party client or adblock on their browser. The revenue from these users is net-loss on paper, however, in reality, they are contributing significantly to the content that the revenue-generators will be viewing. If this content didn't exist, there would not be a lurker to view the content, they'd simply go elsewhere.

Reddit doesn't see it this way, they see these users as revenue losers that need to be migrated to their official app so they can begin to generate revenue. However, as mentioned, the huge backlash indicates that this was a terrible idea. Especially considering that unlike a platform like Twitter, Reddit is divided into sub communities managed with volunteer labour. As with the contributors, these individuals are much more likely to be using adblock or a third-party client. The Reddit app is rubbish, Reddit themselves have admitted this. Power users are going to try and find an alternative method of browsing that they find is better, which they have done.

Reddit absolutely knows this. /u/spez made an indication in his main post for his AMA that old reddit is not going away. They likely have engagement data for this and know that many contributions are made through old reddit. However, old reddit still gives them revenue and it's still their platform. They added advertisements a few years back. https://safereddit.com/r/changelog/comments/c5clgh/ads_are_now_in_feed_on_old_reddit/

TL;DR Reddit wants money, but those who don't use their app don't generate money, on paper. In reality, they do. But it's hard to convince investors of that.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by teflocarbon@lemmy.world to c/nostupidquestions@lemmy.world

We recently had our heater changed to a heat pump and whilst producing the same amount of heat, it's also very energy efficient, using a good chunk less energy than our previous heater.

How do they work and how are they so damn efficient?

[-] teflocarbon@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago

I was exited for it and then I saw Ubisoft. sigh…

So now I can summarise the game for you

  • Please climb this tower to expand the map
  • Here are fifty three billion icons on the map
  • Please fetch me all the antique butt plugs across the map
  • Please find the 1084 shrines and light a single candle in each of them and I will reward with you new pants
[-] teflocarbon@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I'm absolutely horrific with organisation, but I found a few ways of managing things. I never really managed to grasp notifications, eventually they just became an auto-ignore for my brain. What worked more for me was having hints of what I need to do in places that I would naturally look throughout my day.

For instance, with my iPhone, I use dynamic island to keep my current task in a persistent way. It's not forceful and it doesn't interrupt what I'm currently doing. I've also got a large widget on my home screen which shows me some things like weather, date, reminders and calendar events. I see it a few times and eventually I usually manage to enact on it. I unlock my iPhone more than 100+ times per day, so that's 100 potential opportunities to see it and enact on it.

As for filling it with tasks, I usually do that just before I'm about to go to bed. Once I plug my phone in, I have shortcuts give me a notification that reminds me to fill out the tasks for tomorrow. This isn't bulletproof of course, but it helps to try and make it habit somewhat.

Despite the deficiencies, we're still brains of habit, so trying to make that habitual does help. It does help that it's a task that doesn't change.

[-] teflocarbon@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Definitely. I think once he picks himself up after the initial shock of it all, he'd probably give it a go if demand calls for it. He was very passionate about Apollo, I don't think it's going to die here and now, nor do I think he wants it to die.

Tapbots went through the same thing with Tweetbot -> Ivory. It's just really hard to give up labour of love projects, especially ones that you've invested the last decade into.

[-] teflocarbon@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

It looks good in the marketing (it always does) but we should all remember that it’s Bethesda making this. Then again, I can’t even name a developer that I would say “hell yeah, this is gonna be awesome!” at this point. The very sad state of the industry.

teflocarbon

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