Well I used dimensionality reduction to make it 2D so the axes are how the algorithm chose to compress it.
The original data had each data point as a community and the features as a frequency of a user posting in that community.
Well I used dimensionality reduction to make it 2D so the axes are how the algorithm chose to compress it.
The original data had each data point as a community and the features as a frequency of a user posting in that community.
There is actually already a website where people just recreated the bee movie by hand so idk it might actually work as a legal argument.
A few but none that were as good at collecting up to date episodes.
I know I was talking about how the map I linked to worked which is based on reddit.
People say they have problems with discoverability. A map will help people find the content they want faster.
The map up above checks how similar two subreddits are by checking how much overlap the people that comment in both communities there is. It could be the same as that or maybe something different.
The easiest would be to have countries similar to how it had in the map of reddit be the instances and show the connections between subscribers maybe.
I never said we shouldn't use algorithms I just think what those algorithms were doing could be different.
Wait is this the kind of event people have been warning about that can wipe out the internet? or is this not that serious?
Edit: After a bit of research it might not be that big of a deal.
It was one of the first lemmy based meme phenomenon to blow up. Along with that guy that was trying to hold in their shit for 3 days.
I didn't measure activity for this map. Each dot represents a community. I only used the communities that were on the top 35 instances (except lemmings.world which it couldn't grab any comments for.)
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