100 sublemmies? Is that the right word lmao?
no it isn’t, they’re called communities
favorite bands · Lemon Demon; Tally Hall.
favorite artists · cavetown; Neil Cicierega; Bo Burnham; Jack Stauber; Will Wood; Toby Fox.
𝙸’𝚖 𝚑𝚊𝚕𝚏 𝚑𝚞𝚖𝚊𝚗 𝚊𝚗𝚍 𝚑𝚊𝚕𝚏 𝚖𝚊𝚌𝚑𝚒𝚗𝚎
mastodon · @[email protected]
100 sublemmies? Is that the right word lmao?
no it isn’t, they’re called communities
my interpretation is that a nerd is someone who knows a lot about a thing they really like.
it’s nice to see more gecko/firefox-based browsers
craziest image ive ever seen
lemmy and kbin are social media
They’re probably using ActivityPub?
i prefer to use them in microblogging platforms like mastodon :3
nekozuna, turns out she’s a child predator. yeah i no longer listen to the music since i don’t wanna support her.
what’s a rainbow cross walk?
…Twokinds
i have a test today and honestly if i died right now i would be really mad because i’d have studied for nothing
so i guess i keep going because i have and am doing a bunch of stuff and i don’t want that to go to waste
i’ve configured neovim with fennel and i made a fennel lisp port of my small neofetch-like program written in C.
for now i’ve only learned fennel since it targets lua but i’d love to learn something like scheme or common lisp.
I don’t know where to find any up-to-date comprehensible learning resources. Specifically about whatever “melpa” or “non-gnu elpa” are, if the package management is built-in, etc.
I have also seen a bunch of front-ends and I don’t think I know what Emacs is…? Like in the Void repos there’s a command-line one (emacs) but also GTK (emacs-gtk and emacs-pgtk), for example, and even an X11 (emacs-x11) one even though that’s not a GUI toolkit.
for now, configuring neovim with fennel lisp (it compiles to lua), i just like how it works, specially the s-expressions.
i like coding as a hobby but i still haven’t decided on a favorite lisp dialect
(and (lisp programming) (libre software))
Your typical Lemming (for lack of a better term)
idk i like “lemming”
binaries (executables) go in /usr/bin
, flatpaks are installed in their own sandboxes, appimages are wherever you put them.
the shortcuts in application menus go in /usr/share/applications
as .desktop files which link to the app, so the user generally won’t have to worry about where the executable is.
why would the app store ask you where to install stuff??
i have pirated games before, usually games i wanted to buy but couldn’t at the moment. for example: minecraft, which i played pirated for much time until i could buy it.
honestly, now that you said it it’s really more obvious to me how it could potentially end up benefititng creators. i wouldn’t have bought minecraft if i hadn’t played it before.
Idk if it’ll ever be for mine (Samsung Galaxy A51). Hopefully one day, if such a phone exists, i’ll have a phone that is more open and also supported by something like LineageOS.