Deebster

joined 2 years ago
[–] Deebster 3 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

I'm not sure how the Mastodon--(ActivityPub)-->Lemmy bit works, but Lemmy doesn't have a concept of a gallery. The first(?) media is your video, and that's showing up in Lemmy. I assume it's dropping the other images since there's no Lemmy structure to put the other media items into.

btw, now I'm on Firefox/Win10 with the default Lemmy frontend and I can see that video and play it from Lemmy's embed, so perhaps most people can see it (as long as they don't click on the .mp4 link).

[–] Deebster 3 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (3 children)

By "linked" I meant that it's where the URL field of a Lemmy post is pointed at, not the other pages you linked in the post body. Now I'm on a PC again, I see that that link is to the leafy-backgrounded .mp4 (so there's no chance the embedder would have found the other post images if Lemmy didn't present them).

I think the mp4s-not-playing problem is a Mastodon bug/quirk as I've seen it before - neither Firefox nor Chrome can play them when navigated to, but both can play embedded and they work when downloaded. From the console logs, it seems to be a problem with the Content Security Policy stopping the rest of the video loading (since browsers only load the first chunk of a video to allow streaming):

Chrome:

Refused to load media from 'https://furry.engineer/system/media_attachments/files/114/090/866/048/236/635/original/897a5752b038f3e3.mp4' because it violates the following Content Security Policy directive: "default-src 'none'". Note that 'media-src' was not explicitly set, so 'default-src' is used as a fallback.

Firefox:

Content-Security-Policy: The page’s settings blocked the loading of a resource (media-src) at https://furry.engineer/system/media_attachments/files/114/090/866/048/236/635/original/897a5752b038f3e3.mp4 because it violates the following directive: “default-src 'none'”

[–] Deebster 11 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

This reminds me of how in 1930 the BBC said "There is no news" and instead played piano music for 15 minutes.

[–] Deebster 1 points 5 months ago (5 children)

Huh, so there is. I'm not 100% on how Voyager works - specifically I think (but don't know) that it's got the video because it's connected to the linked URL (your original post in this case) and pulled down data to make the link preview.

If that's right, it means Lemmy isn't handing the media at all.

[–] Deebster 22 points 5 months ago (8 children)

My Lemmy app (Voyager) shows the video, so at least some of us can see it.

[–] Deebster 2 points 5 months ago

I liked that you didn't bring up the email comparison until fairly late - lots of people reach for it very early in their explanations, but it's so different to what the Fediverse offers that I think it just confuses people.

I raised my eyebrows clear off my head when you said that the different instances interact "seamlessly", but you did loop back and give a more nuanced/honest account. Good stuff!

[–] Deebster 7 points 5 months ago (4 children)
[–] Deebster 8 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I thank the driver too, but I don't think they'd take it as a compliment if I showed relief that they didn't crash.

[–] Deebster 2 points 5 months ago

That's quite useful in the example given (passing errors back to clients), but I wonder if sometimes these others errors are artifacts from the first error - it would be more annoying to have these false negatives (and wasting time understanding that that's what they are) than having to retry.

[–] Deebster 2 points 5 months ago

I hope this comes about, I miss having a team to support.

[–] Deebster 2 points 6 months ago

Ah, thanks. I thought the article ended at the newsletter box, but I now see there was the extra you quoted underneath.

[–] Deebster 11 points 6 months ago (5 children)

However, a deeper analysis using a query of the FARM (field-accessible reliability metrics) values reveals the true operational history of the drive, thus revealing if they have been used.

I've never heard of FARM. Is this something we can do ourselves?

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