While I don't like neutering an artist's vision in the name of conformity or commercial pressure, it's generally a wise business practice to avoid deliberately offending your potential audience. I suppose a healthy gaming franchise needs new users to thrive, and maybe toning down the excess will broaden the game's appeal.
It's been a good run, and best of luck with future endeavors. Mlem established a good standard of design and usability for others to strive to attain.
Next to each thread's post, you should see an instance specified in parentheses, such as
(lemmygrad.ml)
. Click that item to list other threads from that host, as well as a sidebar box that says Domain
. Click the "no smoking" type of button to suppress everything that domain produces. I think.
Verify it worked by going to your user's settings menu, click the blocked
tab, then the Domains
link.
Complete the effect by combining them with a wristwatch broadcasting your heart rate and the transfixed stare of Apple's goggles.
Die Auswahl ist eher begrenzt, aber die Bücher, Zeitungen und Zeitschriften des Goethe-Instituts sind kostenlos:
It's a paid app only available for Windows and Mac at the moment, but Fork may be worth a look: https://git-fork.com
And that's probably the wiser assessment, given their other activities. Here's the relevant part of that NYT article.
But Meta said it saw no reason to keep its code to itself. The growing secrecy at Google and OpenAI is a “huge mistake,” Dr. LeCun said, and a “really bad take on what is happening.” […]
“Do you want every A.I. system to be under the control of a couple of powerful American companies?” he asked. […] Meta’s open-source approach to A.I. is not novel. The history of technology is littered with battles between open source and proprietary, or closed, systems.
Sounds troubling. But not all of their actions turn out to be completely nefarious, and this could represent a genuine effort to contribute to the next generation of infrastructure. The emerging network protocol appears to offer an opportunity for both non-profit and commercial ventures.
Encouraging progress. Though I'd suspect that clearing the backlog alone may not resolve the problem some users have had with a perpetually stalled signup attempt.
Gnome and some KDE applications used to offer tear-off menus that could be positioned anywhere, similar to NeXTSTEP and its derivatives. Seemed like a neat idea that still deserves some consideration.