[-] jazir5@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 year ago

That sounds like an AI to me

[-] jazir5@lemmy.ml 13 points 1 year ago

So Firefox is basically the GOAT when it comes to internet security and privacy? They should team up with the signal guys.

[-] jazir5@lemmy.ml 11 points 1 year ago

And now it's free with stuff like Let's Encrypt.

[-] jazir5@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This should solve that when it gets implemented.

There’s not a good way to control what content I see. It’s essentially either “everything” or “a single community”. On Reddit, you could already have multiple communities about the same topic on Reddit, but usually one was dominant, and you had multireddits to save you if there truly are a few good related subreddits. Now on Lemmy, you multiply that problem by N instances, and subtract the multireddit feature. This situation simply must be made better somehow.

https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/3071#issuecomment-1653885992

[-] jazir5@lemmy.ml 11 points 1 year ago

Lemmy needs to be easier to use. Finding and following communities is far too complicated.

https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/3071#issuecomment-1653885992

We need to get this proposal implemented. It would pretty much solve the issue.

[-] jazir5@lemmy.ml 27 points 1 year ago

Community grouping. It would massively increase the available content, and make lemmy much easier to browse.

[-] jazir5@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 year ago

Anti-piracy advocates ALWAYS make this ridiculous analogy, there are infinite copies of the software which you aren't depriving anyone of, but there is a physical good in the car of which you are depriving.

10
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by jazir5@lemmy.ml to c/linux@lemmy.ml

I have a Steam Deck and I've been trying to install packages from AUR and have gotten nothing but endless errors trying to do so. The dependencies I want to install have dependencies which have dependencies which have dependencies.

So I've been having so many issues trying to install packages from AUR(or anywhere that isn't the discover store via konsole). I'm coming from Windows where everything is a simple GUI installer and everything is easy to install.

My experience with Linux has unfortunately been a bit of a nightmare. I'll search for a thread on how to install something, and generally the thread responses will have something akin to "just install it with yay or paru, then type this command".

In my experience it has never been that simple. Installing yay or paru first have multiple dependencies, which I'll run into numerous pacman errors, keyring errors, needing to add repos, etc.

Even worse, those dependencies have dependencies, which frequently then have a third or fourth level of recursion where those dependencies also have dependencies.

Something that I expected to take 2-5 minutes becomes a three to four hour nightmare of googling to find the various commands needed to get those installed, and then I'll hit an issue where something like an invalid signature prevents a fourth level dependency required to install the original package without a solution that I can find, which basically means I just wasted 3-4 hours of my time.

And that has happened at least 5 times at this point with various software/programs.

So, a Decky plugin which adds all the required repos, installs a GUI AUR package manager such as Pamac, updates and verifies all the package keyring files needed to install something from AUR, installs all the possible dependencies that could be needed for AUR packages, installs the needed base devel packages(using this command: pacman -S --needed git base-devel), fixes signature has unknown trust issues;

Optionally removes the requirement/need to type sudo in front of any command(which has to be toggled with multiple warnings to prevent inexperienced users from wantonly enabling it), runs: gpg --refresh-keys), runs these commands(pacman-key --init, pacman-key --populate, pacman-key --refresh-keys, pacman -Sy archlinux-keyring) and anything else needed to update the pacman keyring and keep it updated, removes the need to type -S after pacman to install packages from Konsole, easily toggles disabling the Steam OS read only file system;

Integrates the first togglable functionality in this repo's addon which prevents packages from being lost when Steam OS is updated, installs fakeroot using this command(sudo pacman -S fakeroot) and installs all the optional AUR helpers from AUR would genuinely be amazing and save me endless amounts of frustration.

This would simplify installing Linux packages so, so, so much and allow the experience to be much closer to Windows. I currently dual boot Windows because Linux is just such a nightmare for me to work with.

Even installing Pamac has basically been impossible for me(the AUR GUI package manager) due to the four levels of dependencies which have resulted in numerous errors and extra commands needed to run along the way, which has as mentioned before hit me with an unfixable error.

I would be ever so grateful if someone would develop a tool to get all of these automatically installed while avoiding all of the errors.

[-] jazir5@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 year ago

I think we need decentralized search, or rather federated search if possible. Something akin to Lemmy and kbin for search. I'm not sure what the implementation would look like, but it needs to happen I think.

[-] jazir5@lemmy.ml 11 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Im using the Jerboa, official Lemmy mobile app on Android

[-] jazir5@lemmy.ml 20 points 1 year ago

I hopped over here permanently tonight. Uninstalled boost on my phone, and I made Lemmy.ml my homepage. Reddit is just too depressing right now to keep it as my default.

[-] jazir5@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I'm merely thinking about growing Lemmy's popularity. Considering that there will soon be a large exodus from reddit, removing as many barriers to entry to the Lemmy platform/ecosystem will speed up adoption and more of the users leaving reddit would be likely to join Lemmy.

Any artificial barrier to entry will dissuade some portion of users from registering, regardless of how small that contingent may be. I do not want any user to be dissuaded from joining the ecosystem because there is a mandatory invite only requirement for all servers. I'd prefer for the Lemmy ecosystem to grow as fast as possible.

Decentralized social networks rate of adoption is already very slow, and we can see that from the limited userbase of Mastodon which launched 7 years ago and has approximately 4.5 million users compared to reddit's 1.6 billion. Yes, Mastodon launched in 2016 which is much later than reddit did, since reddit launched in 2005.

However, reddit has several orders of magnitude more users with only 11 years of additional time being open.

I'd just really like to see the platform take off.

[-] jazir5@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

We are in total agreement on that! I think a better solution to what I'm suggesting would be a simple indicator on the join-lemmy.org site on whether a server allows automatic account registration to join the server or if it is invite only. Would that be agreeable to you? I think that would obviate the need for any other solution I've mentioned here.

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jazir5

joined 1 year ago