I’ve made this 3 times and every time I can’t get the sauce to emulsify. I’ve heard asking extra starch can help.
I’ve made this 3 times and every time I can’t get the sauce to emulsify. I’ve heard asking extra starch can help.
Still full time remote here. Actually, I’m in the office today for a going-away party for a coworker, but I generally go in once a month or so for town hall meetings and that’s it.
Fair, but this isn’t just free money for grocery stores – it’s no-strings-attached cash that will be spent where people most need it. Which, yes, will be groceries for a lot of people.
I don’t like the handling of grocery gouging, but this specific rebate is not the problem.
I think it was the polling. Once it came down to the wire, a lot of anyone-but-Chow voters backed the person most likely to beat her.
My wife and I’s first date was at a boardgame cafe. We haven’t had a chance to check out any of the cafes in our new city yet, though.
You don’t have to sign up on multiple sites, you just subscribe to specific channels you care about from the site you signed up for. For instance, signing up to lemmy.ml’s Politics, Lemmy.world’s Tech, and fedia.io’s Cats.
For instance, here’s a link to !startrek@startrek.website that you can interact with and subscribe to from your Lemmy.ml account: https://lemmy.ml/c/startrek@startrek.website
That’s actually pretty funny
I recently found pickled radishes at a farmer’s market. So good!
You don’t need more than one account. You just decide which instance you want an account on, then subscribe to all the topics you care about across multiple instances. I just think that generalist instances with thousands of local topics are unnecessary.
I think part of the issue is that all the different Lemmy and kbin instances are trying to be Reddit themselves. By which I mean there are a bunch of instances with no focus. They’re all “kitchen sink” instances, each with their own Politics, Tech, Cats, etc.
Lemmy.world, lemmy.ml, kbin.social, fedia.io. All of them are generic reddit alternatives, but the real reddit alternative is the amalgamation of subscriptions from multiple more focused instances.
Startrek.website is a great example of the opposite: it’s an instance focused on one topic, where some people will want to sign up as a user and others will want to just subscribe to one of their three (!) boards from their own instance. They don’t need their own Politics topic, users on the site that care about it will subscribe to a politics topic from another instance. The startrek admins and mods only have to care about their one focus.
My ideal fediverse feed would be pulling individual topics from a few dozen more focused instances instead of one generalist instance. I think that’s what’s going to end up happening.
Comment whenever you want, but based on Reddit I wouldn’t expect a reply after a thread is more than ~2 days old. That may end up being different here.
I’ve never really experienced misaligned buttons; it always felt like a movie trope, like toilet paper on your shoe.
Not op, but I also start from the middle. By which I mean I go top down, but leave the top few buttons loose and then decide how high I want to button it. The muscle memory is the same for whether I’m wearing a tie or not.
I love democracy
For sure – I just don’t want kbin to get forgotten about, because it’s got the exact same issues that got Lemmy.world delisted: a quickly growing userbase with open signup and limited moderation tools.
kbin.social is really new, so it doesn’t surprise me that active ≈ total.
I see that in both the original post and now this update that the focus has been on improving tooling for Lemmy specifically. I’m worried that kbin isn’t having the same focus on moderation tools. Anyone have some insight into kbin’s roadmap?
My understanding is that here on kbin, a magazine can set a list of tags and toots using that tag will show up in their microblog feed.
Which is a bit different, but cool
Careful, he’s a hero