cabbage

joined 2 years ago
[–] cabbage@piefed.social 3 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Thanks - that's a super useful check list. I think I'll get some porous stones and re-pot. I'll also move it away from the window to a place with more indirect light, and try to collect some rainwater. :)

[–] cabbage@piefed.social 3 points 1 week ago

My watering schedule is a bit messy, I usually just feel the soil and water when it feels dry. I thought first it was underwatering, but then after cutting off leaves that all came out badly (and only growing worse) to let it re-grow we were being more careful to water it, and still they come out the same way.

The plant has been in this climate for over a year now, but this has been a problem only the last few months or so. So it seems to me to be something more going on than just the watering schedule - in the past under-watering would lead to old leaves dropping, but new leaves would mostly be fine.

[–] cabbage@piefed.social 8 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

This could very well be - I think it wouldn't be the first time plants respond poorly to the water here. And it seems to always be starting at the tips very specifically. I'll see if I can find some way to collect rainwater - thank you! Will probably do all my plants good to be honest.

[–] cabbage@piefed.social 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

It's been repotted fairly recently, and the problems seem to have started shortly after really. Maybe it needs to get used to the new pot, but all the new leaves start looking bad after a little while at this point, and the part of the plant that's already grown seems to be gradually getting marks and looking worse.

Thanks for the advice on watering - I'll be more hesitant going forwards! Could very well be that I have been over-watering it, in the past I got the impression that I could do nothing wrong with it.

[–] cabbage@piefed.social 5 points 1 week ago (1 children)

A few months ago - during winter, so it's possible that I over-watered it as it's a very different (colder and darker) climate from what I've kept the plant in before.

If it's root rot, I should just repot it and clip off any bad looking roots in the process?

The fact that they came back looking bad again makes me wonder if this might be the case. It didn't use to respond to under-watering like this in the past (older leaves would die), and I don't think I have been over-watering it lately either.

[–] cabbage@piefed.social 4 points 1 week ago

Then again it seems battery life is a lot better this time around, so this should ideally be less necessary.

[–] cabbage@piefed.social 5 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Yeah, I don't think a lot of people are going to miss this instance, but it seems fundamentally different from lemmit.online and I don't think it should be defederated on the same basis. More in the spirit of making sure rules are somewhat universally applied than its practical implications. And who knows, maybe a huge Lululemon fan (?) is going to sign up to Lemmy.ca some day in the future - the fact that it does not have a lot of active users as of today seems as an arbitrary reason for defederation imho. :)

Somewhat off topic, I kinda love that Lululemon is one of the first fandoms to spin up their own instance. I would have expected Star Wars and Nintendo fans to create their own instance before fans of (or the company behind?) some seemingly random clothes company.

[–] cabbage@piefed.social 14 points 1 week ago (5 children)

So this is an entire Lemmy instance dedicated exclusively to one specific brand of clothing, including a mirror of the associated Reddit community?

I guess it's nice that more normal/consumerist hobbies are also making their way here, not just programming and Star Trek.

I'm not sure the comparison to lemmit.online is fair. On lululemmy, only !redditmirror@lululemmy.com is a Reddit mirror. There's also !lululemon@lululemmy.com, though that community has no posts so far, and also a meta community.

Lululemmy appears to me to be more comparable to 50501.chat, which hosts one Reddit mirror (!mirror@50501.chat) but also a bunch of original communities. Blocking the individual mirrored communities seems to be a better option than defederating the entire instance in cases like these.

On PieFed, bot posts are hidden by default, so the only content I see in !mirror@50501.chat is whatever is posted there by humans. If Lemmy supports hiding bot posts I guess that's another potential solution here.

[–] cabbage@piefed.social 2 points 1 week ago

Yeah, I'm honestly happy about local translations, and I was still supporting Mozilla when it was rolled out. There's just been too much bullshit since.

[–] cabbage@piefed.social 14 points 1 week ago (2 children)

So they don't intend on making a profit from it from data gathering, nobody asked for it, and the open source community who would otherwise donate or contributes to Mozilla are so disgusted by the whole thing tgat they are now just holding their noses and waiting for an alternative.

All of this while Google is stepping down as sugar daddy and they need all the help they can get.

Why the hell are they doing this? Is it just a case of moronic leadership and getting stuck in a negative spiral where the whole operation gets stupider and stupider with each new hire?

[–] cabbage@piefed.social 60 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

"Creators led this revolution"

The same way cows lead a slaughterhouse.

[–] cabbage@piefed.social 7 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

There's always a time between signing the law and the entry into force. It's hard to imagine actors being ready to comply on day one after a new law is passed if they had no time to prepare.

9
submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by cabbage@piefed.social to c/mechanicalkeyboards@lemmy.ml
 

I picked up a Ducky One Mini at a flea market yesterday, and after cleaning it extensively it seems to be working pretty well for the most part. I'm using it for writing and coding, so not having dedicated arrow keys will take some getting used to, but other than that it seems neat enough for the price I paid.

However, the alternative graphic button (on the right side of the space bar) is completely unresponsive. Pressing it just makes no difference at all. I used a tool that maps keyboard presses in Linux (xev), and it showed nothing when Alt Gr was pressed (just like the Fn button), so it seems no signal is being sent from the keyboard to the computer.

It could be that this is due to some setting made by the previous owner, or maybe there's something else going on. Maybe I need to update the firmware. Maybe it's broken. I have no idea.

The back-light behind some of the numerical keys is also disabled or broken, but it doesn't bother me much as I'm not a big fan of back-light anyway.

But if anyone has any suggestions what to try for the alternative graphic key it would be much appreciated! For now I have re-routed right super (Windows button) to be read as Alt Gr, but it's not very convenient when writing Latex and using a lot of curly brackets. :)

 

This song is also definitely not about anything going right now. No, it's a history song about people long, long ago who found themselves trapped on a ship of fools.

In Yiddish with lyrics by Michael Wex.

Geoff Berner is a Canadian musician and songwriter with a background in punk and klezmer, notorious for writing angry accordion songs about being antifascist and/or jewish.

 

Labour has decided to start their campaign with a bang, pruning women of colour and left wingers from the ballot due to reasons such as liking tweets sharing Jon Stewart videos. At the end of the day it boils down to support for Palestine.

Looks like Labour is doing what they can to make sure UK politics remains completely fucked even after the end of the Tory rule.

 

The police stormed the protest camp at the University of Chicago in the middle of the night, leading to a great interview with a student talking about, among other things, the cowardness of following orders.

1
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by cabbage@piefed.social to c/piefed_meta@piefed.social
 

I noticed responding to posts in communities hosted at lemmy.ml gives the following warning:

This post is hosted on lemmy.ml which will ban you for saying anything negative about China, Russia or Putin. Tread carefully.

While I see where this is coming from and I agree with the general sentiment, I'm not sure it's a great idea to include such a message. I basically read it as an invitation to be off-topic and to derail conversations in order to annoy the admins. While it comes from a point of good intentions, it can be disheartening for the people running communities on Lemmy.ml to receive comments about Russia from users basically trying to get banned, in communities that has nothing to do with this issue.

It's unfortunate, but a lot of valuable older communities are still hosted on lemmy.ml, and I think PieFed users should be encouraged to be constructive and on-topic users there as they should be everywhere else.

An alternative suggestion: Maybe it could be useful to remind people which community they are posting in? Like, "This community is dedicated to renewable energy. Please keep this in mind when contributing to the discussion". Then again, that would be a mess to implement in a good way.

1
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by cabbage@piefed.social to c/piefed_meta@piefed.social
 

Hi,

The CSAM scandal the other day got me thinking about the (often lacking) capability of the Threadiverse to deal with quickly with content moderation, and since PieFed has already been a bit experimental in this regard, I figured maybe this is a place where I could ask if an idea is feasible. Sorry if it's a bad match!

The idea is to identify trusted users, in the same way that PieFed currently identifies potentially problematic users. Long term users with significantly more upvotes than downvotes. These trusted users could get an additional option to report a post, beyond "Report to moderator": Something like "Mark as abuse".

The user would be informed that this is meant for content that clearly goes against the rules of the server, that any other type of issue should be reported to moderators, and that abuse of the function leads to revoke of privilege to use it and, if intentional, potentially a ban.

If the user accepts this and marks a post as abuse, every post by the OP of the marked post would be temporarily hidden on the instance and marked for review by a moderator. The moderator can then choose to either 1) ban the user posting abusive material, or 2) make the posts visible again, and remove the "trusted" flag of the reporting user and hence avoiding similar false positives in the future.

A problem I keep seeing on the threadiverse is that bad content tends to remain available too long, as many smaller instances means that the moderating team might simply all be asleep. So this seems like one possible way of mitigating that. Maybe it's not technically feasible, and maybe it's just not a particularly good idea; it might also not be a particularly original idea, I don't know. But I figured it might be worth discussing.

 

Congratulations on having made such a great tool, even in its early phase! It seems very solid.

I'm curious about the long-term plans for the project: Is the idea to work strictly with the Threadiverse (similar to Lemmy), or are there plans to integrate more with the microblog platforms (similar to Kbin)? Any particular difference in approach to Fediverse integration vis-a-vis the two main platforms?

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