Lemmy.ml is supposedly blocked in China
Funny if true.
Funny if true.
New web scraping framework from Alexander Artemenko/svetlyak40wt. Meant to be a CL alternative to Scrapy. Considering we have the great lquery and plump libraries in Common Lisp, building up to a fully featured alternative shouldn't be all that surprising.
https://github.com/40ants/scrapycl/Open linkView original on lemmy.mlFrom https://fediverse.observer/stats
Which seems to not at all come close to representing what you might actually see on Lemmy, not that Lemmy is tiny either.
Has there been any attempt to measure the total active Lemmy userbase? This would depend on the definition of Active but any working definition would be more useful than counting account creation. Something like "posted at least once this quarter".
A fantastic talk about Common Lisp and its possible future, using history of CL's standardization process as a historical backdrop.
https://soundcloud.com/zach-beane/peter-seibel-common-lispOpen linkView original on lemmy.mlI am seeing posts from this community, I can seemingly create posts and replies, yet it's showing "Subscribe Pending". Is this a bug or is it actually pending?
Would Lemmy be a good fit for adding individual "blogging" as a feature? What I mean is the ability for a user to create posts tied to their account instead of a specific community. The default Lemmy Frontend/webapp has all the basic features that would normally make up a blog: ability to make posts, markdown editor, hell even replies that you normally need to disable on blogs because of spam. I can imagine adding a section next to the "Communities" button that says "Blogs" where you could browse users blogs. Not sure if you'd want to federate the blogs but something I'm thinking about.
Not asking this as a feature request on the part of the developers. This should be something I implement myself. But I thought I'd throw the idea out in the wild and see if folks could either tell me "why not" or point out what might be problematic with this.
On Tuesday, April 12, “Defiance actions’’ were organized by the Communist Party of Swaziland (CPS) across Swaziland. The date marks 49 years since King Sobhuza II, father of the current monarch, took absolute power in 1973. The key demand of the protests was an end to the absolute monarchy as well as the creation of a people’s government with a multiparty democracy and democratic ownership of the economy.