Here it looks like the link is added when you make the comment, and the it is added directly to the formatting. I'm guessing you're using an app or some other client to access Lemmy? On reddit, it just recognises the "/r/" and places the link on the front end.
Downvoting is just used as a disagree button, not for its original purpose of promoting discourse and hiding comments that don't add to the conversation.
Any comments that add to the conversation get upvotes. Any that don't, can be reported and removed. I prefer it that way.
As a planner, the solution to traffic issues is 15 minute cities. It's not "leftist", it doesn't impinge on anybody's "rights", it just makes everyone's lives simpler, cheaper and healthier. This is an idealistic view, however.
Nice to see you here. Nice work on Jellyfin, it's a breath of fresh air compared to Plex.
In this case, Raspbian on a Raspberry Pi. I was trying to set up a script that would connect to a network storage device automatically. There's not a simple way to do it, you have to go about it in a hacky way.
I think the crux of the issue is that corporations are quick to throw around the term "AI" as it's a buzz word, and the lay person does not know what it means other than "smart-ish". I'd argue that there is no real AI in existence (yet).
I didn't necessarily mean hard baked into ActivityPub, Lemmy or any particular instance. It could take many forms, some more prevalent and noticeable than others. In a lot of use cases, AI/ML software is quietly ticking away behind the scenes, and you would never know.
What sort of independent plugins do you think we might see? Would you welcome such options, or prefer to reject them?
Weirdly, Battlefield 4. It was the only game I was very good at (top 1000 for skill), and since then the BF games have been less inspiring - also it seems as I get older there's less time I can commit to playing games.
Can you explain what is meant by "stateless root"? I can't find a decent answer online.
What do you think it adds to a keyboard (swiftkey)? The feature is there regardless whether we like it or not. The question is whether you think such a thing should be on the site, and in what form, not whether one user considers to be useful or not.
One thing that it could do is analyse your perceived tone, and suggest edits to come across less aggressive, or more inquisitive for example. Such a thing could well make certain social places a more pleasant forum to use.
As with all new ventures with good intentions, I hope they succeed.
This isn't a meme