It tries to subscribe to the one on lemmy.world as well as the most subscribed one on any instance according to lemmy.world.
metarmask
Karma is tied to the person and is the sum of the score for all posts, or all comments. But it is actually counted by the server, just not displayed in the default UI. You can go /api/v3/user?username=ekZepp@lemmy.world and search for post_score or comment_score.
I think one reason is that unlike a table on say Wikipedia, this table can be over many pages and so the server would have to be involved in sorting, not just the web browser.
There's also this where you need special glasses or it appears white. But not sure you could do it easily, but I know of a friend that had this effect happen on half her screen because of some cracks in the middle.
That's not a new way to change data, it's reading it.
Here's a quick attempt:
- app -- how a link/image/video is opened, and how you see what can be seen and how you can do what can be done. It could do filtering, but then you might waste resources on the platform downloading things you won't see.
- the platform -- determines all actions you can take that can be seen by other users, what settings admins can use
- the instance -- can toggle the aforementioned settings, write scripts for automated actions (even things not allowed by the API), change the web app through styles
I imagine the types of actions you'll do is similar to what can be seen in sh.itjust.works/modlog . It'll be less work in the beginning when you have only a few users, but no one's gonna blame you if you stop. Well maybe you'd want to pass the torch to someone first.
Say I was looking for a community like yours. Since yours is the first one I will likely see much more activity on it and skip the one with 0 if it was created afterwards just for the vanity url.
Since lemmy.ca says it's not restricted to non-Canadian topics and welcomes all, I see nothing wrong if you create it there. Also, if the content isn't images uploaded through Lemmy, I wouldn't worry about taking up resources, as storage space seems to be the limiting resource, not traffic (in the form of bandwidth or CPU time).
Looks like it. Does this mean that what you wrote here will only be visible in the sh.itjust.works instance until lemmyml is online again, or is it more resilient than that?
Yes, there's a B after the name in the web interface.