yea that looks great, I always love those sliders for screenshot comparisons (like https://imgsli.com/ )
Die4Ever
This is not limited to just Lemmy but any federated systems.
Not just federated systems, things like the Wayback Machine exist too, web crawlers, people can save websites too (every web browser has a save option), or you can self host an archiving crawler if you want to backup a certain website, data hoarders exist.
For example, last I heard, an administrator has to drop into a command line to delete media from removed posts, otherwise they’d still be accessible if the URL was known. (Think illegal material.)
that's not true anymore, there's a dashboard built into the website now
I was so confused when I heard about lemmy-ui-leptos, it really sounds like a waste of time to me 🤷♂️
I'm sure everyone has a different opinion, but I think the most important new feature should be the plugin system. It seems like the only way to scale up the number of contributors and support a variety of languages.
I also like the New Comments sort (forums style), I have a widget on my phone's home screen showing Subscribed - New Comments
Scaled is amazing for the Subscribed feed, because I'm (obviously) interested in the small communities that I'm subscribed to. But it's not quite the same when browsing All or Local. Usually I do stick to Subscribed though.
I wonder if there would be enough data on archive.org to rebuild your community?
you can probably find a mirror of the community on one of the big Lemmy instances
account portability is a big topic in 'verse developer circles
I think community portability is a way bigger deal, at least here
I think if communities could have aliases/mirrors, that would mostly fix the problem without completely rewriting all of the ActivityPub spec?
edit: I did find this issue on their Github https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/3100
Lots of people don't like those communities that are filled with bot posts. A lot of people even disable viewing of bot posts. Most of those bot posts have 0 comments.
I just don't think they're a good example to support your case.
Yeah you'll need an account. Once you have an account the easiest way to edit is to click the pencil icon at the top right of the file in the website. You can edit in the web browser and then submit a pull request from there automatically.
I'm surprised this still isn't enabled by default