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submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Hey there. My current home instance's performance is awful, so I tried last night to create an account on VLemmy. I saw the toast saying I would get an address verification email, but that email never came through. Is this a bug, or does that email maybe not actually send until my application has been approved?

[-] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Here are the apps I used that I'm not seeing.

  • FoodNoms for calorie counting
  • Waking Up for guided meditation
  • Finch for gamified general mental health
  • Future for asynchronous virtual training
  • Tripsy for travel tracking
  • Organic Maps for offline mapping
  • Transit for navigating most US cities via public transit
  • Fastmail for personal email (Apple Mail for work email)
  • 1Password for password management
  • Elaho for browsing Gemini
  • Tidal for music
  • Vellum for cool backgrounds
  • SwiftScan for scanning documents
  • iPlum for a cheap business phone number
  • Kagi Search to set the Kagi search engine as the default in Safari
  • Parcel for package tracking
  • Mona for Mastodon

And I'll second some others.

  • Overcast
  • Bookplayer
  • Reeder
  • AnyList
  • Sleep Cycle
  • Signal
  • Obsidian
  • Vinegar
  • Noir
[-] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah, definitely depends on who I'm recommending to. If it's someone who's pretty familiar with games, I think it would be Elden Ring. Love the sense of exploration and discovery in that game.

14
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Recent change in life circumstances, and now I'm trying to figure out how to be an adult about food. I want to focus on eating healthy. I have very little foundational knowledge, so I need ELI5-level content. I'd love some online resources that I could use to learn. In-person classes are not a great fit. Anyone have any recommendations?

[-] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

I switched fairly recently. I was on Ting before, and they appear to be quietly sunsetting that service after Dish Network bought them a few years back. Hoping the same doesn't happen to Mint. It's been great so far. Incredible value!

[-] [email protected] 12 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Illucia: the town of Final Fantasy. This was a Final Fantasy fan site, but themed as a town from a Final Fantasy. This isn't a town ripped out of a particular game though. Illucia was an entirely original town with original art created by fan Tatsushi Nakao.

Before the release of FF7, it was themed after a town from the 16-bit era of Final Fantasy. To navigate the town, the user was presented with a clickable server-side image map, where clicking on different buildings in the town would take the user to a page on the site that was thematically appropriate to the building.

Quick aside: a history lesson on image maps. Image maps were a technique that allowed for a single image to be linked to multiple different places based on where the user clicked it. In the later years of image maps, the web site developer ("webmaster" to use the period-appropriate nomenclature 😜) could define the different clickable areas in HTML and the browser would handle requesting the correct URL based on where the user clicked. This is a client-side image map. Before browsers had this capability though, browsers would instead send the clicked coordinates to a server-side script — often written in Perl, I think — which would translate the coordinates and send back the corresponding page.

Anyway, after the release of FF7, Illucia was reworked in that style. I believe in this iteration, the user would interact with it by using the arrow keys to walk an actual character avatar around the town and enter various buildings rather than clicking on a (relatively) simple image map.

Just like the FF series did, the site sorta lost its luster for me at that point. Final Fantasy had gone from an ensemble cast of quirky but warm characters and brightly colored pixel art to a blue and gray mess of blurry, pre-rendered environments and low-poly brooding characters that looked bad at the time and aged even worse. I pretty much stopped visiting, but I still fondly remember those old pixel art days of Illucia.

Sadly, I haven't been able to find any trace of it online anymore aside from one brief mention in another online article. If anyone knows of anything, please send it my way!

[-] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Sliced turkey, pear, and feta 🤌

[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Sounds like you're talking about Home Assistant maybe?

[-] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago

Maybe for future astroturfing?

[-] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

I'm sure different communities have different reasons for hating Fortnite. I think the primary reason in the communities I run in is that Fortnite used to be a completely different game that was perpetually in development. Then, PUBG popularized the battle royale formula, and Epic sorta just copied that into Fortnite and gave it away for free to essentially steal the audience that PUBG had built.

I don't really play multiplayer games, so I didn't have a dog in the fight. I can understand the hate though. It must be hard to watch the game you love start to bleed players because a massive corporation copies their product, gives it away for free, and makes it up on the back-end by letting players pay to look like popular characters they have emotional attachments to.

I guess the reason it stopped is because it's just hard to sustain hatred for a product for long.

1
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
1
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I've enjoyed the influx of new users over the past week or so. Hope things continue to stay awesome around here even with lots of new faces. So far, it's been pretty great! Thank you all!

1
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago
  • The internet was way better before it became a giant shopping mall.
  • Those cars that don't have the flecks in the paint look like children's toys.

Then, I have a couple that pre-date even boomers by many years 😅:

  • Handkerchiefs kick the shit out of paper tissues.
  • Cars have made the world a worse place.
1
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

This site has been around forever. It gained popularity for a while when the Google search algorithm had it ranking highly for a lot of terms. That went away for some unknown reason with an algorithm update, but the site is still plugging along, its users cranking out quality posts every single day.

3
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I put together a list of onramps to the old web. Very excited to find this community so that maybe I can grow my list!

[-] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Just got around to playing (most of) Mother 3 last year. It has a lot of the same charm and is really interesting in its own way… but it still didn't hit me quite the same way Earthbound did.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I lived for 5 years car-free in Seattle. I'm still car-free, but I'm currently doing a bit of traveling so no longer in Seattle (although I may ultimately end up back there).

It's definitely challenging. I wish there was more train coverage and greater frequency in general of transit service in Seattle. Back when I first moved, car shares were plentiful which made it really easy to hop in a car if I really needed to — maybe 5 to 10 times a year — but that whole thing mostly fell apart. When I left a few months ago, Gig seemed to be doing pretty well.

I lived for 35 years in Knoxville, Tennessee, and it would have been near impossible there. Your world gets very small when you go car-free, and that's a problem in places where everything is spread out assuming everyone will have a car and can quickly traverse the miles between places you might want to be. There's a downtown in Knoxville, but until the last 10 years, almost no one lived there. There's a lot more housing now, but basic amenities like a grocery store and drug store are, so far as I'm aware, still missing. Downtown Knoxville is less a place to live and more a theme park.

I was sad to hear the only full-service grocery store in downtown Seattle closed during the pandemic, but there are still plenty of neighborhoods that are totally livable car-free. Could be better, but it could certainly be worse.

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RadDevon

joined 2 years ago