I’m not sure to be honest. @nutomic@lemmy.ml could probably give you a rough idea, but ultimately it will depend on the overall traffic.
I’m not sure to be honest. @nutomic@lemmy.ml could probably give you a rough idea, but ultimately it will depend on the overall traffic.
Yeah, they’ll eventually drive more and more people into sailing the open seas if they keep making these moves.
“Our pricing is $0.24 per 1,000 API calls, which equates to <$1.00 per user monthly for a reasonably operated app,” the Reddit worker said.
Uhh… Plenty of services charge less than half of that for the same number of API calls, and they are still able to make money. I would imagine that as large as Reddit is, their cost per 1k calls is way less than $0.10, unless their API is poorly engineered and inefficient AF. This is 100% them just trying to drive third parties out so they can get that sweet sweet ad revenue.
What’s funny is there is nothing stopping them from making their own instance. I think the hesitation stems from them coming to grips with reality that few people really want to engage with their messaging when they step out of their bubble.
Fully agree. I think there are some practical, workforce related, use cases for AR/VR, but the idea of strapping into one for 8+ hours a day… No thanks.
Ultimately I agree with you. It’s mostly going to come down to getting more people acquainted to this mindset.
I had a bit of a rocky start, but I picked up the concepts fairly quickly.
The Good:
The Less Good:
m/movies
, whoever runs that mono could add movie-specific feeds from places like lemmy.ml, beehaw.org, etc.All in all, I’m happy with my decision to check this place out and am hopeful more people will come aboard in time. It’s already become a part of my daily routine.
It seems like !movies@lemmy.ml, and !television@lemmy.ml are relatively dead communities (at least on the lemmy.ml) instance. I’m hoping we’ll see more discussions happening over there in the near future.
Perhaps we can call ourselves “threaditors.”
I don’t know what it is, but polish it up, and it would probably make a cool keychain bottle opener.
So basically anything not in post production will be halted. Hollywood execs are complete morons.
Looks like I am drowning…
I’m planning on doing the same with Mlem. I know fuck all about Swift, but I’ll be using it as an opportunity to learn more about it, and hopefully contribute in areas that I am more familiar with.
You and I are in full agreement there. I’m guessing that he’s eventually going to work something out with Reddit, and keep his focus and priorities over there, but I would love to see something heavily inspired by Apollo make it’s way over to this side of the aisle. I’m hoping to start learning Swift (or Tauri+Rust) sometime in the next few months, so if we don’t have something by then, I might take a crack at it personally.
The Witcher 3. It’s probably the only game that I’ve played to completion more than twice.
Oh, I did not realize they were still invite-only. I’ve had access for several months, so I had assumed they had officially opened the door to everyone by now.
Honestly, and I say this with no disrespect, but I feel like the UX is pretty lackluster across this entire ecosystem. It’s understandable, since I would imagine the bulk of developer priority is going towards just making things work as reliably as possible on the backend side of things. Fortunately, given the open source nature of things, I feel like the community will fill these gaps in over time. :)
I’ve been using Arc exclusively for the past few months, and really enjoy the experience. It has so many nice little UX flourishes, and tab management is super clean and organized.
I use MacOS because I’m lazier.