mog77a

joined 1 year ago
[–] mog77a@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

100% this. I remember really really trying to get the hang of them and eventually just giving up and doing it manually every time. I somehow always eventually mess something up or god forbid someone who isn't me messes it up and I end up spending 4 hours dependency hunting. Venv and pip while still annoying are at least reliable and dead simple to use.

However, a container is now my preferred way of sharing software for at least the past 6 years.

[–] mog77a@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Adblock solutions still exist for twitch. I'm using one right now. Never seen a single ultra intrusive pre-roll or full screen ad in months. Banner ads occasionally sneak through.

It does break every now and then for a week or so when twitch updates things, but still infinitely better than sitting through ads.

[–] mog77a@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Seconded. uBlock origin is ridiculously powerful and configurable. It can DRAMATICALLY speed up site loading while only occasionally breaking functionality. Typically if the site is entirely JavaScript rendered like reddit.

[–] mog77a@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago

600K in a month sounds about right. I have an install that's above 13 million, which is a little over 1 year of daily usage.

I also insta-install it when I see an ad and then remove it if it's not my device. The modern internet is shockingly bad without adblocking.

[–] mog77a@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 year ago

I'll be completely real, no.

It's more like it added another folder to my bookmark bar with all of my lemmy instances. I do like the fact that the source code is open source and the overall engagement is through the roof. That's always a good sign.

While lemmy did populate faster than I expected, the experience is not quite the same. It honestly never could be due to the decentralized federated nature of it.

Reddit's mobile experience with patched apps is leagues ahead of lemmy. Desktop is pretty similar though, so all that remains is the size of the community.

I use both maybe 50/50 but my biggest concern is validated every day. The fragmentation is the thing that gets you. It basically places increased burden on the user to manage it. Not sure if there will be a seamless solution to it, or if I have to develop one myself.