It would be cool if something like this could also be incorporated into the apps
What does Voyager do if you click on a link to another instance? Open in the browser?
Thunder tries to resolve the link to your local instance and opens it directly in the app.
get a VPS, run Tailscale and NPM on it and switch to Jellyfin
Keep in mind that VPSs will charge for bandwidth, which adds up quickly when you’re streaming.
One suggestion I haven’t seen mentioned is contacting your ISP. Sometimes you can get a dedicated IP, although you might have to pay for it.
Alternatively you might just break down and pay for Plex Pass. I know that goes against the Lemmy philosophy to the very core, but for all its issues, Plex is still way ahead of Jellyfin in terms of features, UI/UX, etc. Jellyfin will get there, and I’m ready to switch the day that Plex becomes unusable, but that hasn’t happened yet.
Thunder too! Instance/community/user blocks are a Lemmy feature, but keyword blocks are just a client side thing for now. Thunder blocks based on post titles, contents, and links.
deleted by creator
This extension does a decent job.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/pwas-for-firefox/
But yeah it would be nice for Firefox to support PWAs natively.
Aside from future-proofing, can I ask why this is important? I believe you that it is, I’m just curious.
Keep in mind that his private communications have leaked. He talked about what a monster Trump is for making immigrants feel unwelcome and unsafe.
Source for this?
I think people are talking about that because it’s one of the criticisms against Biden in the first debate. Now Trump is the old, tired, crazy man who shouldn’t be in this race, never mind running the country.
Thank you! God the official site is so bad.
That looks like Thunder! You should check out the latest version; it has an improved Block Management page.
I prefer just about every third-party UI to the official one…
Don’t forget Playlet for Roku!
Non-paywalled: https://archive.vn/t0gZ4
It was the famous interview where they asked her why Americans couldn’t find the United States on a map. It went viral at the time.
EDIT: Someone posted the video: https://lemmy.world/comment/12139126
Admittedly one of the benefits of Reddit was the extensive modding community that kept on top of things like this. In some news communities they would remove duplicate stories, even from different sources, for exactly the reasons you mentioned. Of course they could be overzealous too. :)
Thank you, I missed that!
Nice, that’s what I would expect! Lemmy has an endpoint that makes it easy to resolve links across instances. The OP implied Voyager didn’t do that.
https://join-lemmy.org/lemmy-js-client-docs/v0.19/interfaces/ResolveObject.html