All refers to everything that your instance knows about. Your instance only retrieves data for which users are actually subscribed.
All can be weird on small instances if the user subscriptions don’t have a nice distribution.
This is a secondary account. My main account is listed below. The main will have a list of all the accounts that I use.
All refers to everything that your instance knows about. Your instance only retrieves data for which users are actually subscribed.
All can be weird on small instances if the user subscriptions don’t have a nice distribution.
This is a good point for not choosing too small. I’ve made a couple of accounts, and it looks like when a servers crosses that 1,000 or 2,000 user mark you start getting much better consistency than the micro instances with only a few hundred users.
I usually find that I have to reload a few times if I’m the first person to try to subscribe to a community. That happens uncomfortably too often if the instance is small. Even then, it can take a days or possibly never to properly federate.
I’m sure these issues will be fixed, but for now, I’d like myself a small instance but not too small so as to avoid issues with consistency.
I feel like a gigabyte of installation materials is probably a bit more than necessary.
Eczema, where your typical lotion just won’t cut it.
I don’t think shortage means what they think it means. Just because you can’t find people at the price and working conditions you’re willing to offer doesn’t mean there’s a shortage. It might just mean that you’re cheap.
I hate Pinterest links. I don’t even click if it looks like Pinterest. Might as well not exist.
There are moments where it’s like playing a really good game from growing up but for the first time all over again.
Hear yourself a-crackinn
Like an old kaa-zoo 🎵
Yup. My neighbor’s car is outside right now getting their daily parking ticket. They just pay them because they can afford it.
FEED US YOUR DATA BEEP BOOP
Argh, rule, now I have to find something to post before I go.
Perhaps the replacement battery was manufactured a while ago?
On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.
I’m onto you.
LabVIEW is largely visual and used to build production grade applications in engineering.
I seem to be fortunate that both my last cable modem and my router have built-in options to turn off all LEDs, even the power LED, for aesthetics.
Is this basically Ubuntu?
They do intentionally hold back packages based on a random value to do gradual rollouts. See below:
https://askubuntu.com/questions/1431940/what-are-phased-updates-and-why-does-ubuntu-use-them
Could this be your issue?