

At long last, we have created the Torment Nexus…
Avatar by @kyudred


At long last, we have created the Torment Nexus…


Discord-compatible (Use all your custom clients/bots with minimal changes)
I was excited at first, because I thought I could still chat with friends who won’t leave Discord.


Thanks for the archive link.


If you’re promoting Linux, I wouldn’t teach it at all.
Just show yourself doing stuff on the computer like a normal person on Windows what Windows used to be like.
The biggest hurdle for most users is (I think) the mistaken belief that Linux must be complicated.
Because the steps for Xitter were :
Even one extra step that adds friction can lead to you just not doing the thing.
Mega-corpos spend billions to reduce the number of steps to your wallet, because they make it back tenfold.


Update: 8 hours later, no change.
Update: Yep, still nothing.
I’ll check again after 24 hours to see if Lemmy does anything.



The Linux Experiment showed content, but Coffeezilla and Louis Rossman show empty for some reason.


I am beginning to remember what made me think Jellyfin wasn’t user friendly.
Maybe it wasn’t the user interface after all.


Tl;dr:


Yep. What’s considered intuitive UI changes depending on what you’re used to.
It’s why Google fought so hard to put Chromebooks in American classrooms.


I believe you. I feel that way about iTunes (trauma intensifies).
But Jellyfin doesn’t have that reputation.


I set up Plex on my mum’s TV and she can just push play. The UI is intuitive (read: familiar) to her.
Jellyfin has a reputation for giving users more control and customizability, but the other side of that coin is that it’s more “fiddly”.
My users don’t want to fiddle.


I’m betting 650 (PS5 Pro price), with a controller.
Any higher, and the market vanishes.
PC gamers with that much extra money can just build their own, and probably with better specs.
Console gamers will skip a v1 offering that costs more than what they’re used to, especially if their game catalog doesn’t carry over.
I read that. (I literally mentioned features not being paywalled in the original comment.)
If the key doesn’t unlock features, what does it unlock?
Do you get a little thank you message from the devs when you enter it in? Does it add a “Supporter” tag next to your name on the app settings?
The practice exists in both software and games of adding paid cosmetics (e.g. Discord or Deep Rock Galactic) that don’t change the core featureset but allow users to pay more to support the developers, so I think it’s a valid question.


It’s past time for Apple to start killing some darlings with the Vision Pro, but I truly hope it doesn’t go too far and kill the whole platform.
I sincerely thought this thing was already dead and buried.
Haven’t heard a peep from Apple about it in months.
What does the $100 server key unlock (besides “supporter status”), since features aren’t paywalled?


Whoever came up with the idea of sharing them as a gmail-clone is a genius.
Normal Democratic regime behavior. /s