reverseeagle ReverseEagle [DEPRECATED] ReverseEagle seems to be silent for a long time. Is the project still active ? What happened ?
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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearFE
    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%

    Thanks for your reply :)
    I think what you guys started here is really important, the list on your git page shows how widespread this issue is. If FOSS projects can't avoid using such proprietary tools, then how can we ever expect it from others ?

    Even having such a list can be an inspiration for many FOSS projects to move away from proprietary software.

    It'd be really sad if this project dies. I understand that your personal lives are important, but you can try adding more active members to the group for help. And if you ever feel like quitting it, then at least try finding a new maintainer for it before you leave, so the project continues. But I hope that never happens :)

    Edit: fixed typos

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  • degoogle DeGoogle Yourself How to avoid youtube?
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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearFE
    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%

    https://tilvids.com is a nice instance, you can find interesting videos there. Moreover there's a new mastodon account dedicated to recommending good peertube videos, https://mas.to/@FediVideos

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  • linux Linux *Permanently Deleted*
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    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%

    They don't need to federate. Invidious is more like a proxy service for youtube. But its still decentralized, so you can choose any instance from instances.invidio.us

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  • asklemmy Asklemmy *Permanently Deleted*
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    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%

    Good find 👍. I don't know much about youtube on tor as i usually use invidious. For converting invidious link to youtube link, you can just change the instance domain (like invidious. snopyta.org) part from the video URL to youtube.com and it works fine. I think invidious only changes the domain part of the youtube link and preserves everything else 🤔

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  • asklemmy Asklemmy *Permanently Deleted*
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    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%

    Try using an instance from instances.invidio.us. Enable proxy videos option in preferences, this makes sure that you won't connect to google for video streams (don't really know if its necessary for avoiding tor blocks though 🤔). Note that enabling proxy may slow down your network, so choose a reliable instance.

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  • announcements Announcements We've created join.lemmy.ml , to list public lemmy instances.
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    fediverse Fediverse What are your favourite channels on peertube ?
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    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%

    Peertube's main highlight is that its federated (like lemmy). Meaning its not a single website, but rather a network of interconnected websites. It also has features like peer-to-peer streaming, reducing load on servers. sepiasearch.org allows you to search globally on this vidiverse.

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  • fediverse Fediverse What are your favourite channels on peertube ?
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    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%

    I found opensciencevids for science lovers, theartshole for videos about art, thelinuxexperiment for linux videos. You can find more edutainment content on tilvids.com. Its good to see such diverse topics on peertube, share more channels as you find them here.
    Edit: fixed links not working

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  • fediverse Fediverse What are your favourite channels on peertube ?
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    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%

    I like techlore, but i guess most people already know. I recommend if you haven't seen it already.
    Edit: link not working fixed

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  • fediverse
    Fediverse federateduser 4 years ago 100%
    What are your favourite channels on peertube ?

    What channels do you recommend on peertube ? What are your favourite channels and videos on the network ? Let this post be useful for newcomers to the platform. Thanks.

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    degoogle DeGoogle Yourself How to avoid youtube?
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    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%

    You may already know this, but there's a decentralized proxy service for watching youtube videos called invidious. Find a reliable instance from instances.invidio.us and enjoy a cleaner youtube experience without all the tracking stuff. It even works without javascript and doesn't show frequent recaptcha pages while on tor.
    Go to the preferences page and make sure the proxy video option is enabled. This will make sure you never connects to google for video streams. Note that enabling proxy may slow down your network, so choose a reliable instance.

    Peertube is my recommended alternative for leaving youtube behind. Use sepiasearch.org for searching videos on peertube vidiverse.

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  • linux Linux Getting system information in linux the most efficient way
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    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%
    ~ >>> time cat /sys/class/power_supply/BAT0/capacity
    57
    cat /sys/class/power_supply/BAT0/capacity  0.00s user 0.00s system 3% cpu 0.098 total
    ~ >>> time acpi
    Battery 0: Discharging, 57%, 04:55:40 remaining
    acpi  0.00s user 0.01s system 5% cpu 0.105 total
    

    These are very light commands, but i feel like the cat command is more light on resources. acpi might be a better command for general users cause it shows more information about battery. Note that it might not be installed on all systems, so you may have to install it manually. The /sys/class directory is more useful when scripting something cause it works more at a system level and don't need any extra modules or programs for it to work.

    Before i knew about it, i used nmcli -f STATE -t g for checking my wifi connection (on a script), which was way less efficient. The reason why /sys/class method is so nice is cause you don't need any unnecessary modules or programs just for checking simple system things. These different commands we use maybe doing the same thing on our back.

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  • linux
    Linux federateduser 4 years ago 100%
    Getting system information in linux the most efficient way

    `cat /sys/class/power_supply/BAT0/capacity` - Shows your current battery percentage `cat /sys/class/net/w*/operstate` - Shows if your wifi is connected (shows up if connected and down when not) `cat /sys/class/net/e*/operstate` - Shows if your ethernet is connected (shows up if connected and down when not) These are actual files in the linux system that you can open with a file manager and see the output ! There are many more like these in the `/sys/class` directory. My first reaction when i knew about this was like "Why the hell haven't i heard about it before ?". This tip may be useful to general users, but for people who like to do scripting, this can be gold. Does anyone know where to get more information about the `sys/class` directory and what all the outputs mean in different cases ? NOTE: i'm not a linux expert or a professional programmer, but i'm interested in them and learns what i can from online. So i prefer simple solutions that can be easily understood.

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    lemmy_support Lemmy Support Federated communities
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    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%

    I know, starwars & startrek was a bad example for comparing similar communities. I just went along with the examples you gave initially.
    Lemmy has some major differences compared to other fediverse platforms because of the concept of communities and being able to follow them. I'm not an expert, but from what i understand, there are limitations on how much decentralized it can be. I made this post to address some of the concerns, and I'm ok with it as far as we all understand these limitations exist. I hope others would get an idea when they read this post.
    I still think that lemmy is far better compared to traditional platforms like reddit. I'm grateful for this project to exist and i cannot ask you more. Thanks for replying, this was my first post on lemmy.

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  • lemmy_support Lemmy Support Federated communities
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    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%

    Users can follow !news@startrek.com and !news@starwars.com, assume these communities to be similar. How can a user find all these similar communities in the vast federated network ?
    Just to be clear, the main concern here is that such a model of community interaction centralizes the network. If you follow or post something on a community (such as !news@startreck.com) , you are essentially trusting that instance with your data (startreck.com here).

    Consider this situation, !news@startrek.com has 1.5k subscribers and !news@starwars.com has 5k subscribers.
    A general user would be more likely to post something on !news@starwars.com as it has more subs and will get replied quickly, get more upvotes, etc. This would inturn get !news@starwars.com more subscribers as more people post on it (This is a lock in situation)
    . This cycle will continue to grow !news@starwars.com community and starwars.com instance would get monopoly on that particular topic in communities. This would mean that instances with more successful communities receive more interaction than others. Even if these instances are trustable and privacy-friendly, how can they handle the unfair amount of load on their servers ? (this would also increase the pressure to monetize)

    The fediverse is designed to be decentralized. Even if we found different workarounds for these issues, then what's the point of lemmy if its not federated properly ? The main reason why people would switch over to something like lemmy is because its decentralized over other traditional sites like reddit.

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  • lemmy_support Lemmy Support Federated communities
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    federateduser
    4 years ago 100%

    Sepia search is a unified search engine for the peertube vidiverse. Here, we are not looking for a unified search engine, but a unified page for communities about similar topics. This has to be done for each topic or interest, and is much more harder to do compared to a search engine.

    That's the reason why i recommend the idea of federated communities, so that each community can choose which other ones to follow (kinda like instances). This way, you don't have to manually find and group together different communities, the communities would do it themselves by following other similar ones.

    But, if we're gonna take the ladder, we can actually create something like Sepia search for this thing too. Something like a community-grouper website, that finds similar communities across different instances and group them together as a bundle. These bundles can then be imported to a lemmy client app to fetch content from all the instances and view them on a single page. This is like an extension of my first idea, but with this website doing the work for us, users don't need to find communities themselves.

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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearLE
    Lemmy Support federateduser 4 years ago 100%
    Federated communities

    Can communities (or subreddits) follow other communities from different instances ? From what I understand about lemmy, there can have communities with the same name on different instances. So that you have to follow each of them individually. But one important feature of traditional sites like reddit is that you can follow one subreddit (or community) and get all the updates about that topic, interest etc. And i believe its important for link aggregators to have such a unified place for a topic. One solution to this problem would be to put communities with the same name on a single page on your device with a lemmy client app. So that community Abc@instance1 and Abc@instance2 would show on a single page when subscribed to both. But this won't work well if Abc@instance1 and Abc@instance2 are about different topics despite having the same name. Also, this means the user again have to find and follow each community about a topic manually to have the same experience he would otherwise get from a single community on reddit. Applying the fediverse logic here, it would be really nice if communities could follow one another. So that the users can get a similar experience to traditional link aggregators while keeping it decentralized. this would mean that if Abc@instance1 follows Abc@instance2, all of the posts from Abc@instance2 will be available on Abc@instance1 as well. NOTE: I don't know if any of such features already exists, but let me know if a similar feature or a different workaround for this issue exists. I am suggesting this as an end user and don't know much about the practicalities of it, federated communities can complicate moderation for example.

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