You need to view your subscribed communities, they’ll show up there. By default it’s probably either showing Local or All.
You need to view your subscribed communities, they’ll show up there. By default it’s probably either showing Local or All.
Everything except for the UHS-III part, yes. Some UHS-II stuff exists, but I think it’s limited to full-size SD cards right now, and the Deck only has a UHS-I bus.
The SD Association has this page explaining the speeds, and from what I can see, it’s just to guarantee speeds with certain bus types. Most devices currently use a UHS-I bus, and the older speed classes cap out at pretty pathetic numbers, so they’re kind of useless. For the steam deck, any of the higher-end cards are going to be about the same, and the IOPS are going to be more important in terms of loading times anyway.
2TB cards don’t exist quite yet.
The SDUC standard exists, but no, there aren’t any commercial 2TB microSD cards yet, though they’re coming.
I didn’t make posts all that often on reddit, but I definitely commented a fair amount. The problem I’ve got with lemmy right now is there’s not as much discussion about stuff I’m interested in, so I’m mainly just looking at All instead of keeping to my subscribed communities.
I haven’t been having issues with my lemmy.world account, other than the occasional slow/failing to load page, but that gets fixed with a refresh.
I’d say separate. You can only interact with the other instances through your instance, and while they use the same protocol, lemmy and mastodon are just fundamentally different styles of communication that don’t mesh well together.
It’s hard to tell because the graphs aren’t labeled very well, but it looks to me like those graphs for comments and posts are the total numbers, not the numbers per day. In my anecdotal experience, there’s just no way lemmy is already getting as much new comments and posts as reddit, it’s just not that busy.
Edit: Oh wait, I see they go down at the end. Hmm, I wonder if they’re double counting posts and comments then.
If you’re looking at subscribed or All they do, but the local feed is the default, and that only shows stuff on the local instance, in this case lemmy.world.
If you mean your profile, that will show all your activity on every instance.
That is absolutely disgusting, I just can’t believe it’s happening in a “developed” country.
I believe Kotor 1 doesn’t require a connection to play, and it’s more of a tactical game, so it’s not as annoying to play on a touch screen.
FediFinder worked for me, although not too many people I follow on twitter moved to mastodon, which sucks.
I wanted to make an account on lemmy.ca, but they have to approve registrations manually, so I picked the one I saw people talking about the most.
I guess because they like Japan, and Japan has a really good rail network.
Yeah, I’ve decided to at least give it a good shot, to try and see if I can stick with lemmy and mastodon. My current problem is I’m finding it really hard to find people to follow on mastodon, and to find enough active communities on lemmy to sate my social media appetite.
Yeah, I don’t know how it could ever work well, they’re just totally different formats, and honestly, I’m fine with them being separate
God so many problems:
And the most awful one: In the section about how it’s nvidia’s fault, he literally moves all the products up one name instead of down, to compare core counts to a GPU generation that’s literally 7 years old. That’s literally exactly what Nvidia is trying to do to get more people to pay more for their graphics cards. All the GPUs this generation are way more cut down compared to the last several generations(also, the 4060 and 4070 are even worse than the speculation in that graph, being 19, and 35% respectively.
The story in this game sounds so interesting, and it’s so well written and voice acted. And wow, this was made by Bungie, I’m surprised it wasn’t mentioned in the video. The music in the intro really reminded me of Halo music, so that makes a lot of sense.