It’s based on LoL but they’re both riot games–what I said was confusing which was why I deleted it
professional idiot.
I’m the developer of the Photon client. Try it out
It’s based on LoL but they’re both riot games–what I said was confusing which was why I deleted it
both OS ask a process to end nicely? Then force closing in windows is with task manager or kill -9 in linux
This is one of the best photos i’ve seen in a while. It makes me wish i was there
This must have changed recently since i remember having to add an explicit case to show just “Moderator”
The moderator is only given if the action was taken on your local instance
A side effect of me being terminally online is that you can predict the top comment of some posts
Photon doesn’t exactly have keyboard navigation, i’ve been working on it though
I’d say the biggest criticism is that it’s the largest instance, and is also a “general purpose” instance, which sort of takes away from the main goal of the fediverse. When 90% of content comes from one instance, it opposes the goal of decentralization.
I chose lemdro.id because it’s nice and fast, the admins are very good, and its main topic is around technology/software which I like
It is not weird. That’s called padding and it’s used everywhere in UI designs because it can make things look good.
i was thinking vertically
Padding is a very versatile thing in UI design, and none of it will make anything look terrible.
Even in your first example, the toolbar has slight padding on the edges and so do the buttons.
The reason there’s more padding now is because it makes it easier for new users to process everything.
The creator of a post cannot choose the default sort for the viewers.
A feature that’s be nice is giving you a higher upload limit if you make your upload temporary.
Lemmy will be indexed less than Reddit, ignoring user counts, because lemmy-ui is client rendered. Googlebot and some others can still index client rendered sites, but others will ignore the content.
Younger than the iphone 👶
photon doesn’t directly communicate with the backend, it’s not intended for that. but even then, lemmy-ui is almost entirely client side (for some reason) and it makes its calls to the API
I removed it because I don’t want my app to necessarily depend or be associated with any specific centralized external source, like MBFC. By adding it to my app, I’m implicitly supporting its use, which wasn’t necessarily my goal.