I don’t think Bing had a clue what you were asking it, but some of those are amusing.
Interests: programming, video games, anime, music composition
I used to be on kbin as e0qdk@kbin.social before it broke down.
I don’t think Bing had a clue what you were asking it, but some of those are amusing.
Definitely! I usually name my files starting with YYYY_MM_DD
(which makes it easy to sort by the date I started making the file), a number for which entry it was on that day (1,2,3,4… plus sometimes a letter too if I want to keep multiple drafts), and a few words if I have other details I want to remember. e.g. “transcribe_song_by_artist
” or things like “cont_YYYY_MM_DD-entry
” when I continue working on a piece from a long time I ago. Sometimes I add a title after that too if I wanted to give the piece one.
Deliberately copy snippets of a work you’re interested in as a study – e.g. transcribe it – and experiment with elements you find interesting (rhythm, chords, synths, effects, whatever) in small test pieces to make sure you understand what’s going on. Let the ideas stew for a while and then much later try to use the techniques you learned in a real piece.
That’s what I do anyway.
I think the term would be “necrobump”
That’s from old school forums where posting to a thread bumped it back to the top of the feed and thus thrust old info prominently into everyone’s view again. You won’t get that same bump effect with most sorts on Lemmy. (“New comments” sort might work like that though? I’m not sure exactly how that’s handled.)
otherwise everyone has moved on
It’s pretty rare to get much of a response even after just 24 hours or so – not just in terms of comments, but even for upvotes. I think after that point, posts are usually so far down people’s feeds that almost no one sees it any more. That probably also discourages most people from replying since basically no one will see it. (Maybe the poster of the thread or comment you’re replying to will see it, but probably almost no one else will if it’s more than a day or so old.)
Some people do dig through community archives and/or user profiles – particularly after a new thread is posted – and they’ll occasionally upvote old posts, but they very rarely comment.
Just the other day, I got a reply to a thread from ~6 months ago on kbin!
It was spam. :/
I quit YouTube along with reddit last summer. I don’t use alternate interfaces. I haven’t found a replacement for most of the niche content I liked to watch there – and yes, that sucks.
I’ve mostly been watching offline content (like DVDs and things I downloaded years ago) when I want video entertainment, and doing other stuff with my free time.
You might think that’d mean more time playing games given my interests, but I’ve found I’m a lot less enthusiastic about playing through games if I can’t watch an LP or two of it afterwards. So, I’m actually playing (and also buying) less of those than I used to too.
Add a couple of JoJo-posing anime characters and this could be a scene out of Paradise Killer.
The export JSON includes
followed_communities
andblocked_communities
among other details.I’ve never tried doing an import though, so not sure what happens if you upload a partial export (trimmed down to just the communities).
Note the import/export functionality referred to here is on Lemmy-UI’s (i.e. the default lemmy frontend’s) account settings page.