web dev and digital artist making !lemmynade@lemm.ee
I have several of those
Spatial computing has gone too far
I found this on the web for, “no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no”
Pumpkin seeds, almonds, cashews, spinach, and black beans are among the best
Added this to the !lemmynade@lemm.ee roadmap
Some of the main bots that are posting these are all on the same instance that are dedicated to Reddit posts, so you can block those whole instances in your settings
Talking to a text-to-image model is kinda like meeting someone from a different generation and culture that only half knows your language. You have to spend time with them to be able to communicate with them better and understand the “generational and cultural differences” so to speak.
Try checking out PromptHero or Civit.ai to see what prompts people are using to generate certain things.
Also, most text-to-image models are not made to be conversational and will work better if your prompts are similar to what you’d type in when searching for a photo on Google Images. For example, instead of a command like “Generate a photo for me of a…”, do “Disposable camera portrait photo, from the side, backlight…”
One solution to this would be having humans in the board room instead of parasites. Not sure who’s idea that was
For a static site, I would personally choose Astro or SvelteKit—both of those are highly optimized for static sites. In my opinion the syntax of these frameworks feels closer to plain HTML/CSS/JS than React and will naturally teach you more about the fundamentals as you go.
If you’re just starting out, the most important thing is to really make sure you learn your JavaScript Web APIs and other HTML and CSS fundamentals as you go. The better you know these, the better your websites will be regardless of which framework or tools you choose. These fundamental skills will have the highest reward for you in the long term.
And ask a ton of questions here too!
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The closest I know of is not completely free or open source, but it’s by Ubiquiti Labs and it’s really good for a mobile video editor. Mentioning it because it might still meet some people’s criteria:
Ah, it ended up being my language settings for me
Same thing happened on !lemmynade@lemm.ee from a new test account I created on lemmy.ml. All posts are still visible from other accounts.
Definitely take this all with a grain of salt—I am by no means a legal expert, this is just my advice.
Required by law in Germany if you are collecting any sort of data about your users (even if it is being collected by a third party through your app, or if it is entirely anonymous data).
Required by law in Germany for the same reasons as the Privacy Policy. This agreement makes it clear how your users’ data is used.
Required by law in Germany if your application uses cookies of any kind (mostly applies to web app and web technologies)
Highly recommended. This may protect you immensely if and when you end up in a legal situation down the road.
Otherwise, you should look into these as well if applicable:
These documents matter most if (1) there is money involved or (2) when you are receiving, processing, storing, or sharing user-submitted content or any data about your users. This is because you are less likely to end up in a legal mess if you’re not taking people’s money or data.
Starting out, you can find templates for these online. A template will be better than nothing at all. Then, if you are able down the road, you can hire a legal professional to write and review your documents for you. A legal professional might recommend more specific documents or different versions of the same document as well.
Not sure about Germany, but in the United States it’s fairly inexpensive to start an LLC. You can then put legal documents under that new entity instead of your own personal name. This can protect you and your own belongings from any unfortunate financial or legal situations.
Again, if you’re not receiving money or any user data, you don’t have to worry quite as much. However, it never hurts to play it safe. Mistakes happen and anyone can get sued.
Do you have to manually approve every single script, even if it’s from the same origin as the site you’re visiting?
This is not possible on the official Lemmy UI and as far as I know no third-party apps or clients support this either. What some third-party apps do support is hiding content based on keywords. If the content that annoys you has some words in common, maybe you could use those keywords in a third-party app to filter it that way?
We’ve had a few of these built on my planet too actually
Oh nice, yeah that could still be pretty convincing. I might even be able to get away with an ::after instead. I’ll mess around with it, thanks!
Yeah I don’t blame you, I even uploaded the wrong example photo at first lol
EasyPanel is a hidden gem. Caprover feels very robust and the main dev is really friendly. Coolify is still under development but looks very promising.
I use Caprover mostly since it supports managing multiple servers through Docker Swarm, otherwise I’d probably be using EasyPanel.