hydrospanner

joined 2 years ago
[–] hydrospanner@vlemmy.net 8 points 2 years ago

Laranity on YouTube has some fantastic tips like this on the "things you probably don't know" videos that she occasionally does.

One that lots of people probably already knew but that I learned of within the past year or so is that if you're moving things from your inventory to a stack of that item in your bank (not material storage...if they go there, use the drop down menu to send them), that you don't have to find the item stack in your bank.

Just double click the stack in the inventory side of the bank dialog (not in your actual inventory window), and it'll automatically stack them on top of an existing stack of that item in your bank.

[–] hydrospanner@vlemmy.net 5 points 2 years ago

Within the game, you can also access the event timer by typing

/wiki et

Into the chat.

[–] hydrospanner@vlemmy.net 5 points 2 years ago

On this note, I like turning on the option that limits the skill placement marker of ground targeted skills to the skill's actual range.

[–] hydrospanner@vlemmy.net 4 points 2 years ago

When you're fighting a world boss, significant champion, or any enemy that is an event unto itself (read: has an event with a skull symbol, and is the main target of the event), you can click on its orange health bar in the sidebar to target that enemy.

This can be very useful in chaotic fights with lots of mobs running around, when hitting tab might guess wrong a dozen times before putting you back on the main one, and there's too much visual clutter to get a good targeting click on the mob itself.

[–] hydrospanner@vlemmy.net 1 points 2 years ago

Those are among the worst, yes, but even the existence of subs like gonewild can have the effect of repelling potential users, especially those who don't have an understanding of how the site is organized.

They read an article that talks about a sub for content they find objectionable, and from that point on, Reddit is "that site for (insert content they dislike here)".

Much the same, I'm concerned that Lemmy will be known among those users as "that site for communists that support the CCP".

[–] hydrospanner@vlemmy.net 3 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Like the goblins of Moria.

I guess that makes spez the balrog...or maybe the cave troll.

[–] hydrospanner@vlemmy.net 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I would definitely consider that a serious potential issue, if for no other reason than so many communities will likely find a use for tags based on the nature of the community structure.

For example, I could see a ton of communities having tags for things like modposts, new member intros, meta topics, memes, questions, reviews, how-to's/tutorials, guides, etc. and that's just for broad post types that would apply to thousands of communities.

I think letting users manually make their own multi-lems, perhaps with the ability for communities to sort of team up to make uber-lems of closely related communities to help users discover more of them...but sub, unsub, multi, and un-multi as they see fit...is likely the best approach.

[–] hydrospanner@vlemmy.net 21 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Maybe don't take disagreement so personally?

I too would like to do this myself and not have AI or anyone else decide for me what content gets lumped together.

I predict that this is also an issue that will slowly resolve itself over time, as critical masses of users gradually coalesce around one community, or more...but only if the extras are distinct in some way...which would very specifically be made more difficult by the sort of programming you're proposing.

I'm not saying there's no merit in your suggestion, only that it may not be the one-size-fits-all solution that you seem to think it is

[–] hydrospanner@vlemmy.net 2 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Exactly.

It's analogous to the way that Reddit knowingly allowing some subs to exist repelled some users.

Most were able to get past it and simply not subscribe to subs they found objectionable, but I'm sure many people just stayed away once they learned that certain subs existed and were very much known about by Reddit admins.

One key difference here is the way that your instance is able to enforce rules and to some extent influence and filter your user experience, and that's worth consideration too.

I'm also curious if and how an instance like lemmy.ml can, for example, delete comments, ban users, take down content in cases of cross-instance interaction. Could the admins of lemmy.ml, for example, ban a user from another instance from Lemmy completely? From their local communities? Could they remove that person's comments? Can they prevent their own users from seeing content they don't like on other instances? Can they moderate content from their users that is posted to communities on other instances?

[–] hydrospanner@vlemmy.net 4 points 2 years ago

Well said.

In that case, I think the reddit administration did a good job of excising the people it didn't want, letting them take root elsewhere before the main mass went to check that place out, and letting that main mass come right back.

At the time, I thought it was a calculated and intelligent move on their part, fully intentional.

After what we're seeing now, I think maybe they lucked out.

I guess it's some sort of Hanlon's Inverse Corollary: Never attribute to intelligence what can be adequately explained by dumb luck.

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