asudox
- 36 Posts
- 502 Comments
Still playing that game from 2007 with ps3 graphics lol I just wish that the !tf2@lemmy.world community gets bigger.
If you feel like you have nothing to offer in a relationship besides just friendship, it might be a sign that you are not ready for a relationship yet. However, you might try and have a relationship with someone and see what happens. If it goes well, then your judgement of yourself was wrong, if not then you aren’t ready for it yet.
DDLC.
ddlc ending spoiler
The 3750 hours were spent on the last part of DDLC talking to Monika
The correct syntax for embedding images is:

I mean, my browser just deletes all the site datas as soon as it closes, so this isn’t really a problem.
asudox@lemmy.worldMto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Why do posts frequently get removed on Lemmy when Reddit would not remove them?English18·2 years agoI see, I guess the bot also has its own problems sometimes. Anyways, the problem indeed was your spam in the comments section. As I mentioned in the parent comment, I don’t only take the title and the body of the post into account, but the behaviour in the comments section as well, which wasn’t well as you can see in the photo above. This was ultimately spam or nonsense, therefore I decided to remove the whole post. In further posts, make sure to include them in the body of your post instead of spamming the articles in the comments section, editing a post is a feature in Lemmy. As for the lock, that was a missclick.
asudox@lemmy.worldMto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Why do posts frequently get removed on Lemmy when Reddit would not remove them?9·2 years agoYeah thanks for your reports, I’ve handled a few of them here. Reports are always welcome.
asudox@lemmy.worldMto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Why do posts frequently get removed on Lemmy when Reddit would not remove them?451·2 years agoThey also give no reason at all
There’s an automated bot in LW that sends users the reason for why their content got removed or why they got banned, etc. Not only that, but every communities modlogs are public. You either could have received a reason by the bot or you could have checked the modlogs. And also, the title or the content is not the only factor I take into account when I remove someone’s post. I, for example, also consider how the OP behaves in the comments section to determine if the post is made just for the OP to troll people or not. I might also lock the post if the post gets too many reports or there’s too much drama going on in the comments section.
And by the way, the reason why I deleted it for rule 3 is very obvious:
asudox@lemmy.worldOPto Open Source@lemmy.ml•GitHub - Asudox/lemmy-wikibot-rs: A lemmy bot written in Rust to send summaries of wikipedia articles mentioned in user comments2·2 years agoWell, that wasn’t something I have planned. For now, you can just take the wikipedia link from that parent comment, mention the bot with it and send it as a comment. Will implement that feature, thanks.
That was a year ago. I doubt anyone’s still running that outdated 23gb model still on torrents.
Bot comments?
asudox@lemmy.worldto Open Source@lemmy.ml•Zed - A code editor written in rust by Atom's Developer.1·2 years agoThough I don’t really understand why they chose MacOS as the first platform to support.
asudox@lemmy.worldOPto Open Source@lemmy.ml•GitHub - Asudox/lemmy-wikibot-rs: A lemmy bot written in Rust to send summaries of wikipedia articles mentioned in user comments2·2 years agoThat indeed was my concern when I discussed this with the user that suggested this mention-only setup and also in the long text I sent to the user in the convo I sent you.
asudox@lemmy.worldOPto Open Source@lemmy.ml•GitHub - Asudox/lemmy-wikibot-rs: A lemmy bot written in Rust to send summaries of wikipedia articles mentioned in user comments2·2 years agoAbout that, well, read this conversation I had with another user that mentioned your idea:
I’d just like to interject for a moment. What you’re referring to as Nostr, is in fact platforms using Nostr as its protocol to communicate with each other. You see, ‘Nostr’ is just the protocol. But when you add the wide range of available clients, it becomes a fully functional fediverse. So, it’s more fittingly dubbed clients powered by Nostr!