NoRodent

joined 1 year ago
[–] NoRodent@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

Can single-key shortcuts finally be changed/disabled? I can't count the number of times I thought I had focus in a different element or even different application and accidentally archived, marked as spam or otherwise hid several e-mails just by a typing a single word.

[–] NoRodent@kbin.social 11 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

I'm afraid that's just because spammers, trolls and other bad agents haven't discovered this platform yet and/or there's not enough people here for spamming to be worth it. The current selection of users who were likely to join also probably has an effect. Once (if?) this grows and reaches more general population, I'd bet it will look similar to /r/all/new.

Edit: It's a kind of paradox. You want more users on the platform so that there's enough content and more niche communities can form but that inevitably makes the place less pleasant. Although this moment is still very, very far for kbin. I mean Reddit became absolutely humongous in the last several years.

[–] NoRodent@kbin.social 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I tried Lemmy yesterday but today, probably thanks to the influx of new users, it's been extremely slow to the point of unusability. So now I'm trying out kbin which seems to be running faster (although still slower than old.reddit). Ignoring those issues, I can't decide yet which I like more.

I'm also still kinda confused about all the Federation stuff. So supposedly you should be able to interact with kbin hosted stuff on lemmy and vice versa and I can indeed see posts from lemmy on kbin's "front page" but what if I happen to come across something directly on the lemmy.world website (or any other Fediverse instance for that matter, where I don't even have an account), is there an easy way to access it from kbin.social?

I feel like the decentralized nature of Fediverse is at the same time its strength but at the same time makes it harder for users to switch.

[–] NoRodent@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago

On my nightstand:

The Wandering Earth, by Liu Cixin (author of the famous Three Body Problem trilogy), hard(-ish) sci-fi.

It's a collection of short stories named after the first story, Wandering Earth. I'm still only in the very beginning of the first story but it already introduces some really interesting ideas which is what I loved about the Three Body Problem. So I'm sure I'll like the rest. If you liked TBP, I'd definitely recommend.

On my phone:

Hyperion, by Dan Simmons, 1989, sci-fi/space opera(?)

Does it need introducing?

Anyway, since I don't read on my phone all that much and usually only in short bursts (meaning I usually read each page at least twice), for the past month, maybe even more, I've been slowly getting through the first chapter (The Priest's Tale) but once it got to the cruciform thing, I had to finish that chapter in one sitting. Now I started the second chapter, The Soldier's Tale, and can't wait for being mind blown again. Already got amused by this:

There were tales of cadets receiving fatal wounds in the OCS:HTN sims and being pulled dead from their immersion creches.

So... If you die in the Matrix, you die in real life too. Is that where they got that idea from? :) It's always fun reading through old sci-fi classics and finding likely inspiration for newer stuff or even inventing something that everyone else then uses later. Asimov's Foundation was all like this, so many things that eg. Star Wars straight up copied (eg. Trantor/Coruscant).