It's all inline images. I assume the devs haven't implemented image markdown yet.
Not an audio engineer, but I had unshielded (thin) cables in my home speaker setup. If the cables were positioned correctly, everything was fine. Accidentally move them even a little, and there'd be a huge amount of noise, due to power cables going near the speaker cables. Switched to shielded (thick) cables, and there's no noise ever.
Use your instance's search feature. You can search
- Name of community:
No Stupid Questions
- By using !community@instance syntax:
[!nostupidquestions@lemmy.world](/c/nostupidquestions@lemmy.world)
- URL of the community:
https://lemmy.world/c/nostupidquestions
First option won't work if your instance hasn't federated the community yet. The last option is best in my opinion.
r/Blind is still a valuable resource for many people. No sense denying people access to it. r/Blind mods already created a Lemmy instance which they try to promote for their members. But learning new software can be challenging when you can't see, especially if the software isn't very accessible.
Someone needs to start a "campaign" for naming and shaming companies who advertises on Reddit. "[This company] supports a company that actively discriminates against the disabled. #SayNoToReddit"
- On desktop browser you can see list of your subscribed communities on the front page of the instance, below the sidebar (you can collapse the sidebar). On mobile you can expand the Subscribed list. You can also click your name in upper right corner and choose profile. Your communities are on the side (desktop) or bottom (mobile).
- You can search for communities either by their name, using the !community@instance syntax (for example, !memmy@lemmy.ml) or by the community's URL (for example, https://lemmy.ml/c/memmy). That last option usually works, when the other two might fail. If the community is not yet federated with your instance, you can wait a few seconds/moments, and the instance might pop-up in to the search results. Or search again later.
That list won't show which instances have block the home instance. The blocked list lists only the instances the home instance has blocked, not the other way around.
Lemmy.world is not yet 0.18, so that too might affect it.
It’s not a feature of Lemmy and, I guess, no-one has wanted to create it for their app. You should submit this idea to the Lemmy developers so it will eventually be a feature in every app.
Make sure that your changes actually “sticks”. There are multiple reports of people trying to delete or edit posts, only for them to come back soon after. It seems that deleting isn’t possible and when mass editing posts, there needs to be long enough delay (5 seconds or so) between each edit.
Maybe, but how many of them are by bots?
Did you just ask that has Reddit ever given anything back to their volunteers, besides sticks, rocks and ill will?