Reddit believes in an open pay to access internet, but not the misuse of public content our content we didn’t make.
Reddit believes in an open pay to access internet, but not the misuse of public content our content we didn’t make.
A few possibilities,
No matter the reason, well behaving crawlers will no longer crawl reddit, Everything is disallowed in the robots.txt
User-agent: *
Disallow: /
reddit recently updated their robots.txt to disallow all crawlers Google paid a bunch of money to have access to crawl reddit
You’ll still see old stuff, but crawlers that care about robots.txt will get no new information.
That reddit filter will have less than an effect than it used to. Reddit blocked all crawlers except google.
I don’t have an answer for you, I pay way too much from a local tea shop, but you might get better suggestions with answers to the following
the next dev, Hey this obscure feature probably doesn’t work, should I fix it… No, I’ll just patch “temporary-fix-don’t-use” and let the next guy fix it properly.
Partial rebuttal. If you increase the power draw, you need more pins dedicated to power and ground. Without reducing functions, this needs a different footprint. They have had issues with some CPUs in the past. bugs in complex systems are basically unavoidable, its just in hardware you can’t just issue a software patch to fix it 100% with no negative effects.
Nvidia has been anti-competitive as long as I can remember. They put out dev tools that basically break games on AMD. That’s just their operating model. I don’t know that that’s enshittifying as it often makes their own product better, its just being an anti-competitive ass.
I can’t comment too much to your other points. I think some of the memory was down to the memory chip makers, not the product makers, but I can’t back that up.
You might not like the prices, but computer components, cpu, gpu, motherboard… keep getting better each generation, some bugs cause issues, but that’s due to trying to maximize performance, not cheeping out. 3-d printer tech. In fact, thinking about it, a lot of competitive products keep their quality. Also small brand premium products in general.
He’s had a bit of the chuckles before https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xrwf9gSLcNM, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V61VWE5P5z4, and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=juv0BOhUTcc
Glad it worked. It looks like its for getting the big stuff while communityboost is designed to help find the small.
From the way I read it, you create a user for the tool so when you submit your instance, it can run on your instance. One of the users chosen at random is here https://discuss.tchncs.de/u/communityboost
You can read a discussion about it here https://pawb.social/post/4136386
I also came across https://github.com/Fmstrat/lcs
Edit: Looks like https://sh.itjust.works/u/iso might be the user behind it.
There is a tool I’ve heard about that subscribes to remote communities for federation until a real subscription. https://boost.lemy.lol/
how about jekyll? Lots of customization available.