Cadende

joined 3 years ago
[–] Cadende@hexbear.net 56 points 11 hours ago (13 children)

ad blockers, people, I'm begging you

 

Before people get too bent out of shape, obviously this sort of experience is built on a foundation of privilege and social connections that most people don't have. In a modern western society you'd have a much harder time doing this as a less privileged person, and frankly governments and businesses do their best to make it impossible and illegal.

But I see these sorts of articles occasionally, and I've talked to one or two people who live sort of like this IRL, and I do still feel like there's some interesting things to discuss about people that live like this and if some lessons from it can be applied to more people or society more broadly.

This caught my eye:

“I actually feel more secure than I did when I was earning money,” she says, “because all through human history, true security has always come from living in community and I have time now to build that ‘social currency’. To help people out, care for sick friends or their children, help in their gardens. That’s one of the big benefits of living without money.”

I think there's an element of truth to that. This type of model isn't a substitute for ending capitalism by other means and providing things like housing and healthcare and such for all, but I do think a society that makes room for more people to live productive and fulfilling lives at the margins would be a better society in some way that I'm having trouble articulating. (And a society where everyone has secure housing and healthcare and such as a right, would be one where more people are secure enough to be a benefactor to others)

[–] Cadende@hexbear.net 1 points 18 hours ago (1 children)

on the mobile app? I don't have that

[–] Cadende@hexbear.net 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (3 children)

idk what you're using for last week view but it seems to be around 20% for big router nodes in the heart of the city here atm

[–] Cadende@hexbear.net 13 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (13 children)

so that's 3/4 that you're saying to avoid because you personally have deemed their moderation policies objectively inferior (and judging by 1 and 2 you probably think the same about hexbear?)

sounds like they're just instances you politically disagree with, one of which does happen to also be massive. I'm not saying redditors should come to those 4 instances, they mostly shouldn't (grad and hexbear don't want most of them, .ml has been trying to not be "the default instance" since forever, and world is a shithole and already massive/centralizing), but your choice of list was transparently more political than it was about centralization, why not just be honest about that?

Or are you going to pull the "moderation policies are (or should be) objective and apolitical" canard?

[–] Cadende@hexbear.net 2 points 1 day ago (5 children)

maybe, in the future, if meshtastic takes off/just doesn't die out. But if you're complaining about the community being too small then clearly your area isn't at that point yet, right?

My city is still not maxing out LongFast even with the very robust local infrastructure

[–] Cadende@hexbear.net 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (7 children)

wait so you switched off of LongFast, the channel where all the organic community is because it's the default and has enough range to tackle decent distances, and are now posting about how empty it is as if MediumSlow is representative of meshtastic as a whole?

I can get hundreds of nodes in my city on LongFast, there's a robust community mesh, but if I switched to MediumSlow I'd also get zero peers, because nobody uses it rn. Non-standard channels are only useful if you get organized (my local mesh has talked about switching over to a different channel as a group), or are using it for personal use with your immediate crew and have your own router nodes if necessary

[–] Cadende@hexbear.net 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Do people use this for any real application?

as far as I can tell in the hobbyist circles near me, no or rarely (things like communicating while hiking or camping are discussed but mostly in the hypothetical it seeeeems like). It's treated like ham radio where I'm at, where it could theoretically be useful in an emergency but until there's a major disaster to test it it's just nerds pinging eachother just to see what they can do. amateur radio is actually useful though, not sure how meshtastic will fare.

It seems like there are more practical uses for people in certain circumstances outside of the city though. I've seen homesteads and farms pop up as little remote clusters on some of the online maps, and people talk about having a home base station on a tower or the roof and then they can communicate with eachother from out in the fields (tends to be pretty flat so the range is better). Still hard to know how well used it is in those scenarios

Personally I like the idea and would actually use it for local chit-chat with friends family and fellow nerds, but the reliability of message delivery even when you're both connected to the mesh pretty well, seemed poor. I heard the newest firmware releases were supposed to improve message routing (not just using flood routing for all messages all the time) but I haven't tried them yet. Even with how big the mesh near me is, all the meta chat seems to be happening on discord not on the mesh itself

[–] Cadende@hexbear.net 16 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (15 children)

"I hate centralization, we should do less centralization"

posts a list of instances to avoid, 3/4 of which are actually much smaller in active users than his own, presumably just all instances he politically disagrees with

[–] Cadende@hexbear.net 11 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

yeah https://speedboatdope.com/rss/ errors out. whoever hosts it likely has to fix their script

https://jumble.top/f/chapotraphouse.xml this seems to work

[–] Cadende@hexbear.net 5 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

On the other hand, I also came across posts where people were saying SD card read speeds on Android are just generally bad, especially on more recent versions were they are hampered by some kind of new file access system.

This is correct as far as I know (for android 10+). I ran into it with an open source maps app a while back and read up. Google intentionally kneecapped (and in later versions I thought almost eliminated) micro sd file access APIs for apps. For "security" reasons (not entirely junk but not entirely honest either) but it does just happen to align really well with their goal of forcing everyone to put everything in their cloud storage and access media by streaming not local storage

linkety: https://osmand.net/docs/user/troubleshooting/maps-data/

[–] Cadende@hexbear.net 6 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

this is... worse than I thought. Dude is a straight up grifter mooching on the open source community's good name and EU grants, and not a good project maintainer to boot.

[–] Cadende@hexbear.net 32 points 5 days ago (1 children)

yogthos has returned!

thanks for all the posts

 
1
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by Cadende@hexbear.net to c/commrequest@hexbear.net
 

There have been a lot of requests for new comms lately and not even a discussion of actually implementing any of them that I've seen. That isn't really fun or welcoming to new people. It makes the site feel static and unevolving.

Yes, we already have a fair number of comms and a pretty small userbase, but the default setting is to browse All, so splitting up posting across more comms shouldn't reduce the pool of posts, and having more specific communities if anything should inspire more posting. Anything that has repeat issues with self-moderating can be locked or deleted, but I don't really see the issue with letting people go wild on this. The freedom to create your own little space, niche specialty community, or novelty gag community inspires a lot of creative posting in my experience and could bring in new users as well. We may not want to lifeboat any big subreddits, but letting people set up their own little spaces can't hurt too much, right?

Let new comms live and die by people's actual usage of them, rather than not letting any exist in the first place. If we have posts on this comm getting 15+ upbears, that is enough posters to get a small community going, no? let alone other posts getting 30-50 upbears, often with well known community members volunteering to moderate and still no response. And those are just the people posting and upbearing despite most of us knowing full well new comms basically never get approved. The current system just isn't working, IMO.

Admins, if there is something I'm missing here that makes this an intractable problem I'm open to hearing it. If that is the case, can we set objective criteria for creating a comm rather than defaulting to "admins ignored your post: denied"?

Everyone else: do you have any thoughts on this? I think it could work. Obviously if comms cause issues they can just be nuked. I'm fine with aggressive moderation, but as it stands now I think creativity is being stifled.

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