Find the latitude of any place.  

MORPHO/USDTLeverage: 20-75xEntry Targets:2.332.27Take-Profit Target : 1)2.52)2.83)3.24)3.8

Also, "image description" and "alt-text" is not the same.
An alt-text is or should be an image description. But image descriptions don't always have to go into the alt-text. Very long image descriptions and/or image descriptions that have to contain information not available anywhere else in the context may also remain in plain sight, e.g. in the post text if it's a Fediverse post.
CC:
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #AltText #AltTextMeta #CWAltTextMeta #ImageDescription #ImageDescriptions #ImageDescriptionMeta #CWImageDescriptionMeta I can tell you what not to use in alt-text.
For one, don't put line breaks into your alt-texts. It doesn't matter whether Mastodon renders them. A lot of things in the Fediverse that aren't Mastodon don't render them.
Besides, don't use the quotation marks on your keyboard. They may irritate certain frontends from rendering them as " to ending the alt-text prematurely because they take the first quotation mark in an alt-text for the end of the alt-text.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #AltText #AltTextMeta #CWAltTextMeta #FediTips

MORPHO/USDT

Leverage: 20-75x
Entry Targets:
2.33
2.27
Take-Profit Target :
1)2.5
2)2.8
3)3.2
4)3.8

Stop-Loss 1.90

Ukraine delivered 200k domestically-produced drones to front-line units so far in December

With equipment from partners, more & more Ukrainian-made weapons are already operating on the frontlines

manufactured drones Kyiv close the gap as they face Russian forces with more shells on

also aims to ramp up the production of -range and

Es gibt da eine Gruppe, die sich irgendwie "FediDevs" nennt.
Die haben unter eine Art Portal eingerichtet, wo man sich registrieren und Starter Packs fr Mastodon anlegen kann, so hnlich, wie es sie auch auf Bluesky gibt. Mastodon-Nutzer knnen dann diese Starter Packs nehmen, um mit einem Mausklick rubbeldiekatz dutzendweise Konten zu folgen.
Problem Nr. 1: Auf kann man sich nur registrieren, wenn man auf einer der Instanzen ist, die FediDevs indiziert. Siehe , da ist eine lange Liste aller indizierten Serverinstanzen. Die allerallermeisten Instanzen sind aber Mastodon-Instanzen, und Pleroma, Akkoma, Hubzilla, (streams) und einige andere werden berhaupt nicht indiziert.
Problem Nr. 2: Es ist ganz offensichtlich technisch unmglich, in den Starter Packs irgendwas einzutragen, was kein Mastodon-Konto ist. Guck dir die Starter Packs an. Nur Mastodon-Konten drin.
Noch besseres Indiz: . Das Starter Pack ist komplett leer. Ganz offenkundig hat der Ersteller versucht, einen Starter Pack mit Nicht-Mastodon-Konten und -Kanlen anzulegen, aber daran dann gescheitert, weil es ganz einfach nicht mglich war, in den Starter Pack irgendwas einzutragen, was nicht auf Mastodon ist.
Problem Nr. 3: Die Starter Packs funktionieren selbst auch nur auf Mastodon. Ich kann sie nicht auf Hubzilla nutzen, du kannst sie nicht auf Akkoma nutzen.
Das Ganze ist also grtenteils absolut mastodonzentrisch und inkompatibel zu allem, was nicht Mastodon ist. Mich beschleicht auch das Gefhl, da die paar wenigen Nicht-Mastodon-Instanzen, die FediDevs indiziert, nur durchgerutscht sind, weil sie an den entscheidenden Stellen hinreichend kompatibel zu Mastodon sind.
Aber trotzdem steht FEDIDevs auf der ganzen Sache drauf.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #LangerPost #CWLangerPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #NichtNurMastodon #FediDevs #StarterPacks Well, it is possible to use the Mastodon client API for features that Mastodon itself doesn't have like text formatting. But, for example, many mobile apps don't support text formatting because Mastodon doesn't, although everything that isn't Mastodon does. They're built only against Mastodon.
And there are things, mostly Web services, that either do the same, use the client API, implement only Mastodon features and depend hard on features that only Mastodon has. Or they skip APIs and build directly against Mastodon, again, requiring the presence of features only available on Mastodon in the required way.
Then they have the audacity to have "Fedi" in their names while being completely incompatible with Pleroma, Misskey, Iceshrimp, Friendica, Hubzilla etc., essentially everything that isn't Mastodon or maybe a Mastodon fork.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Mastodon #MastodonAPI #FediverseDevelopment I guess people who only know Mastodon see this differently from people who actively use something in the Fediverse that is not Mastodon.
The difference is:
If you "implement ActivityPub", it will work with, for example, Mastodon and its forks, Pleroma and its forks, Misskey and its forks, GoToSocial, Friendica, Hubzilla and (streams). As long as they have a reasonable ActivityPub implementation itself.
If you "implement Mastodon", it's only guaranteed to work with Mastodon.
It may or may not work with Mastodon forks, Pleroma and its forks, Misskey and its forks, GoToSocial and Friendica. If it doesn't, it never will because the non-Mastodon Fediverse is not officially supported. In fact, the devs may not even know that there's something in the Fediverse that's federated with Mastodon, but that isn't Mastodon.
It will most likely not work with Hubzilla, which is what I use, and (streams). They, too, are federated with Mastodon, by the way.
But this is the way a whole lot of things in or for the Fediverse are developed.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Mastodon #ActivityPub #FediverseDevelopment Die Starter Packs von FediDevs sind hart ausschlielich gegen Mastodon gebaut. Nicht gegen irgendeine Mastodon-API, sondern direkt gegen Mastodon selbst ohne irgendeine API.
Nicht nur kann man sie nur auf Mastodon nutzen, sondern man kann zu Starter Packs auch nur Mastodon-Konten hinzufgen.
Untersttzung fr Pleroma, Akkoma, Misskey, die Forkeys, Friendica, Hubzilla usw. mte jeweils einzeln Stck fr Stck ins Backend eingebaut werden, weil das Backend von jemandem gebaut wurde, der entweder nicht wute, da das Fediverse mehr ist als nur Mastodon. Das, oder das ganze Backend mte weggeschmissen und neu gebaut werden, und zwar so, da es projektunabhngig funktioniert.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #LangerPost #CWLangerPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #NichtNurMastodon #FediDevs #StarterPacks The Fediverse itself is diverse. And I'm not talking about various Mastodon apps. I'm not talking about Mona vs IceCubes vs Tusky vs Fedilab vs the official Web interface. I'm talking about vastly different server applications: Mastodon vs Iceshrimp vs Hubzilla vs Lemmy vs PeerTube.
The Fediverse is diverse enough for some Mastodon users to actually be disturbed by this diversity. Just look at my profile, look around the entire server instance, and tell me how close it is to Mastodon. Or look at the mention. Mastodon doesn't turn mentions into long names. Or look at the length of this comment. This is not a case of a hacked character limit. This is a case of there never having been any character limit in twelve years.
It's just that many other Mastodon users don't notice it because they're in a bubble that's almost or entirely only Mastodon.
The Mastodon-to-non-Mastodon rate for Fediverse instances is about 1:2. Two out of three Fediverse server instances are not Mastodon.
For monthly active users, it's about 7:3. Around 70% of active Fediverse users are on Mastodon. Admittedly, this is skewed somewhat because there are no stats that count actual users on Hubzilla and (streams) who make use of nomadic identity and/or multiple channels on the same accounts.
But for many Mastodon accounts and entire Mastodon instances, the rate for active Fediverse users known may pretty well be about 100:1. You can take all users from Pleroma, Akkoma, Misskey, Calckey, Firefish, Iceshrimp, Sharkey, CherryPick, Catodon, Mitra, GoToSocial, micro.blog, Socialhome, Friendica, Hubzilla, (streams), Lemmy, /kbin, Mbin, PieFed, Pixelfed, PeerTube, Owncast, Funkwhale etc., you can put them all together, and you can still have a hundred times more Mastodon users.
In fact, I'm quite convinced that there are lots of Mastodon accounts that follow hundreds of other accounts, but they're all only Mastodon accounts which, in turn, only follow Mastodon accounts themselves. Some people have spent all the time from October 30th, 2022 to today quite active on Mastodon, but without noticing anything from outside of Mastodon.

#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Mastodon #NotOnlyMastodon #FediverseIsNotMastodon #MastodonIsNotTheFediverse What are the chances that the ActivityPub side will get full (or any) support for Pleroma and its forks, Misskey and its forks, Friendica and other things that use the Mastodon client API
Or even server applications that can speak ActivityPub, but that don't have the Mastodon client API implemented
I sincerely hope that Surf isn't built against only Mastodon so hard that it's impossible to add more than just incidental and unsupported compatibility with anything that isn't Mastodon.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #ActivityPub #NotOnlyMastodon #FediverseIsNotMastodon #MastodonIsNotTheFediverse Add your location to a Google Map Mastodon did start out as a full-stack Web application AFAIK. It used the OStatus protocol, the same protocol as what GNU social was based on and what StatusNet was using prior to its merger with its own fork, GNU social.
However, at first, it was not positioned as a fully independent project of its own, much less a federated walled garden that allegedly only connected to itself. It was initially conceived and advertised as an alternative to GNU social proper with a different, "easier-to-use", more Twitter-like GUI being its main selling-point.
I guess it's pretty obvious that what was working underneath was not GNU social proper either. Two examples to prove this:
Neither Identi.ca nor StatusNet nor GNU social had a rigid, hard-coded character limit of 500 characters. Mastodon had it from the get-go.
Also, Identi.ca, StatusNet and GNU social had a summary field. It was part of the OpenMicroBlogging and OStatus protocols. Both Friendica and Hubzilla made use of this summary field as such. Mastodon did not have the summary field implemented because summaries were pointless if all you had was 500 characters.
Fast-forward to 2017. Mastodon had meanwhile repositioned itself on the "market" as a stand-alone microblogging platform, implying to be a "decentralised, federated walled garden" with its own exclusive technology that nothing else used, and that nothing else connected to. Something that just about every last Mastodon newbie takes Mastodon for still today.
At some point in 2017, a Mastodon user from the demo scene with some development experience submitted a pull request to Mastodon's GitHub repository which would repurpose this very same summary field as a content warning field. The pull request was accepted and merged. Ever since shortly afterwards, Mastodon users started believing that Mastodon's content warning field was invented by Eugen Rochko from scratch. And they still do.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Identi.ca #StatusNet #OStatus #Mastodon #Friendica #Hubzilla #FediverseHistory

VET/USDT

Entry price : - 0.05450 - 0.05300

Target 1: 0.055
Target 2: 0.057
Target 3: 0.060

Stop loss : 0.051

Leverage: 10x

Allocate only 1-3% of our deposit for each trade

BTC/USDT:

ENTRY:-104000 -103000

LEVERAGE: ( 10x-20x )

1 105000
2 106000

STOP-LOSS: 102600

This is also why I find the western Misskey forks' desire to pander to mobile users by trying to function with existing Mastodon Clients so counterproductive - the Mastodon Clients often just don't care. They really only are for Mastodon and everything else is "good luck have fun".

Or rather, "Wait, you exist!"
And IIRC, Misskey has its own client API. Aria seems to be the shooting star mobile app for the *keys.
Frontless servers to me are a bad idea, as things stand - despite the appeal in speeding up initial development.

In this regard, Pleroma and Akkoma are the best of both worlds. Headless server, own client API, respective official frontend has its own repository, but you may install third-party frontends instead. And Mangane is actually (also) built against the *omas. "Akkomane" is a thing.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Misskey #Forkey #Forkeys #AriaApp #Pleroma #PleromaFE #Akkoma #AkkomaFE #Mangane #Akkomane That, of course, sounds like trouble. No frontend offers you the full functionality with no problems. But still, it's obvious that Hollo is developed for a Mastodon-dominated Fediverse with a side of *key and little regard for anything else. I wouldn't be surprised if the Hollo dev, like at least three quarters of the Fediverse, had never even heard of Hubzilla.
Hubzilla is a special case in many ways. It wasn't built into a Mastodon-dominated Fediverse because it was initially created some four years before Mastodon. Also, it doesn't have replacing Twitter as any of its goals. You can use it for microblogging, yes, but then, you can use it for almost anything. Even runs on Hubzilla.
Granted, Friendica is even older. After all, Friendica's own creator started Hubzilla as a Friendica fork. But Friendica's new developers decided for Friendica to approach Mastodon in some ways. In Hubzilla's case, in stark contrast, it's an explicit design and development decision not to do that. Part of Hubzilla's philosophy is to remain independent from the rest of the Fediverse.
Hubzilla is also one of the few Fediverse projects whose ActivityPub implementation is not designed for maximum Mastodon compatibility. That's partly because Hubzilla is the only Fediverse project that had ActivityPub before Mastodon. And Mastodon's adoption of ActivityPub caused quite some head-butting between Mike Macgirvin and Eugen Rochko.
That's only some of the reasons why the Mastodon API would never work for Hubzilla, and Hubzilla will always require its own tailor-made frontends.
Beyond that, there are those many, many things neither covered by the Mastodon API nor by any Mastodon-compatible app. And I'm not just talking about CMS or groupware features like , cards, , webpages or . (That is, Hubzilla's CalDAV calendars are edited the best with external apps, but via CalDAV and not via the Mastodon API.)
It actually starts at Hubzilla's handling of identities. Your identity is not tied to your account. Your login is not your identity. . And thanks to , you can have the same channel, the same identity, on multiple server instances with different accounts and logins.
An app based on Mastodon and its API would only let you access your default channel at best. At worst, it won't let you access anything because it expects your identity and all your stuff directly on your account, and it's completely unaware of the existence of channels. This is already a feature that's essential for using Hubzilla, but that absolutely requires a UI tailor-made for Hubzilla.
Then there is the distinction between posts and comments. Hubzilla does not mimic Twitter. It's closer to Facebook and blogs.
For one, Hubzilla doesn't display content bit by bit like Mastodon does, at least not by default. It's actually an option that nobody ever uses which may be why it's no longer available on (streams). Instead, it always displays conversations as a whole, just like Facebook, just like blogs, just like forms. Post on top with a title, comments below in chronological order. Always. Even when a new comment comes in, or someone has liked or repeated a comment, when you go and look at what happened, you get the whole thread.
Speaking of which, on Hubzilla, you don't usually do as you'd do on or Mastodon and scroll through your feed/timeline until either you hit stuff that you've already read, or you want no more. Instead, Hubzilla, like everything that Mike Macgirvin has made, has a counter for unnoticed actions. If you open it, you get a list of these actions that you haven't paid attention to yet. Click one, and you're taken to the thread where it happened (and only that thread is shown to you), and everything that was unread in this thread is flagged read.
In addition, has only one editor for everything, posts, comments (which are posts), DMs. So does Mastodon. So do all Twitter/ alternatives in the Fediverse.
But Facebook doesn't. It has a separate entry area for comments. So do blogs. And so forth. And so does Hubzilla. It has , and it has right at the bottom of each thread. It's geared towards having these two separate editors. Even using Friendica, which does have the Mastodon client API implemented, with a one-editor app has to be hackish.
All this continues with text formatting. Unlike the *keys and some Mastodon forks, Hubzilla doesn't use Markdown. It uses . This goes all the way to integration of OpenWebAuth magic single sign-on and .
Generally, image handling, including alt-text. On Mastodon and its forks, you attach your images to your posts as files, and then you get one dedicated entry field for alt-text for each image.
On Hubzilla, you first go to your and use it to upload the images you want to add to your post to the WebDAV-enabled file space built into your channel. You have to pay attention to setting the permissions both for the image files and for the subfolder correctly. Then you go to your post editor (not the comment editor which doesn't officially support inserting images) and select the image you want to embed. And then . (Notice how I've linked to a Hubzilla support forum instead of the WIP help rewrite because there still is no official documentation on how to add alt-text on Hubzilla.)
Any UI elements geared towards the Mastodon way of adding images to posts are useless on Hubzilla, and nothing on a UI for Mastodon can be used to add images to posts the Hubzilla way. Again, you need a Hubzilla-specific UI for this.
By default, and I guess it's actually recommended, posts and comments are composed in raw BBcode rather than WYSIWYG. The lack of a preview button in your average Mastodon app is actually a lesser issue, although it still is an issue.
Next, posting permissions. Mastodon has "Public", "Unlisted", "Followers only" and "Private". All apps are geared towards this.
Hubzilla, in contrast, has the . It offers you to post in public, to post only to yourself, to post to one of your (think Mastodon lists on piles of coke and 'roids), or to post to any individual custom selection of connections of yours. There's no "Followers only", there's no "Unlisted", and there's stuff that's completely unthinkable from a Mastodon POV.
Oh, and if you run your Hubzilla channel on bone-stock standard default settings, you post to a privacy group named "Friends" unless you explicitly choose otherwise. But you have to be able to choose otherwise in order not to only post to that privacy group. An app made for Mastodon won't give you the UI elements to do so.
In fact, an app geared towards the Twitter-style dichotomy of followers on the one side and followed on the other side will clash with Hubzilla because of just this. Again, Hubzilla is not like Twitter. It's like Facebook. It doesn't have one-sided following connections. It only has like Facebook friends.
This means that , but with a UI made for Mastodon, is next to impossible at worst and very, very limited and much less than optimal at best.
For example, let's suppose someone wants to connect to me. On Mastodon, I'd just simply confirm their follow request if I've chosen to do so. Then I may decide whether or not I follow them back.
Here on my Hubzilla channel, a connection request takes me to the . There I choose a for the new connection that defines which permissions that contact shall have. I add the connection to one or multiple privacy groups, of which I have a lot. I adjust the affinity slider. I may also assign to that connection. I may add lines to one of the two filter lists which I have per connection. Finally, I usually hide the new connection. And then I confirm it which not only grants the permissions in the contact role to the contact, but also establishes a bidirectional connection. It's like automatically following everyone back on Mastodon.
Apart maybe from the confirmation button, not even a single one of these features is available on any of the Twitter replacements in the Fediverse, and thus, not in any of the apps geared towards these either. If I were able to use Hubzilla with a Mastodon app, I'd still have to fire up a browser or a Web app or wait until I'm back home to confirm connection requests.
All this only covers your daily operation. I haven't even talked about yet, including the which defines the basics of Hubzilla's extensive permissions system.
There's exactly one app that works with Hubzilla. It's called , it's only available on F-Droid, it hasn't been updated in over five years, and it's actually a Web app that works like a specialised browser and embeds Hubzilla's Web UI.
A fully dedicated mobile app for Hubzilla that entirely relies on a native mobile UI would be so complex even for normal operation (disregarding the CMS bits) that it'd be more complex than K-9 Mail. If you want to go all the way, including (which controls Hubzilla's optional features, and which of these are available to you can differ from hub to hub) and CMS features and such, it'd be even more complex.
The only realistic way to have different frontends for Hubzilla would be the built-in theming feature. It doesn't mean different colours and button styles. A theme on Hubzilla can be an entirely different UI, but one that you can individually choose for each one of your channels. It's like being on Akkoma and being able to switch between Akkoma-FE, Phanpy and Mangane on your account at any given time.
That is, currently, Hubzilla has only got one built-in theme. It has become , and it even as a dark mode which is every bit as configurable as the light mode. More themes are being worked on in the community right now, but I wouldn't count on them coming with all stock Hubzilla installs, much less automatically added to all existing hubs.
So if you want an alternative UI for Hubzilla, you don't install it next to your hub, just like you install Phanpy next to Hollo or GoToSocial. You install it into your hub instead.
And the best way of developing alternative UIs for Hubzilla is not as fully separate external applications that try to latch onto Hubzilla from outside. It rather is as .
Hubzilla is modular and extendable with third-party repositories.
Lastly, both desktop and mobile use can profit from it because the best way to use Hubzilla on a phone is as a Progressive Web App.
, maybe this is interesting for you as well.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Hubzilla It depends. Not everything works well frontless because not everything works well with a frontend made for Mastodon.
Hubzilla, for example, has a UI that's largely stuck in 2012. Also, it doesn't have the Mastodon client API implemented. But a frontend designed for Mastodon couldn't even cover 5% of Hubzilla's features. It would not grant access to features that are actually critical for operating a Hubzilla channel such as any parts of the permissions system.
And that's actually one of the reasons why Hubzilla doesn't have the Mastodon client API implemented: The only UI that can sufficiently harness Hubzilla's power is Hubzilla's own native Web UI.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #MastodonAPI #Hubzilla
so that those who need alt-text have as much information as possible.

Well, depending on where in the Fediverse you are, a whole lot can be possible.
I tend to make a whole lot of use of my possibilities. Hubzilla, where I am, doesn't have any character limits, at least none worth worrying about.
Sure, depending on your contacts, it makes sense to limit your alt-texts to no more than 1,500 characters because Mastodon, Misskey and their forks chop them off at this length if they're longer. Even Hubzilla itself can no longer fully display alt-texts of over a few thousand characters because they can't be scrolled. And alt-texts of such length are very uncomfortable for screen reader users because screen readers can't navigate alt-text.
But at least for my original images, I also give long image descriptions in the posts themselves in addition to the ones in the alt-texts. And with "long", I mean not "essay", but "short story". "Excessive" if you want.
My personal limit there is 100,000 characters for the whole post. As far as I know, Mastodon rejects longer posts than that entirely, and other Fediverse server apps have even lower limits, so describing my images actually becomes increasingly pointless. But 100,000 characters of description would take me three or four days to research for and write anyway.
Still, while my image posts remain within that limit, I regularly describe and explain my original images in tens of thousands of characters each. I see it as justified, given the very obscure but potentially curiosity-inducing topic. But others may say my long descriptions are way overkill, hardly anyone even reads them because it may pretty well take one hour to do so, and literally nobody actually needs them.
That's why I'm constantly wondering if I'm going overboard with details in my descriptions. Hence the question at the end of my first comment.
CC:
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #AltText #AltTextMeta #CWAltTextMeta #ImageDescription #ImageDescriptions #ImageDescriptionMeta #CWImageDescriptionMeta

XRP/USDT

Entry price : - 2.48 - 2.43

Target 1: 2.55
Target 2: 2.62
Target 3: 2.70

Stop loss : 2.39

Leverage: 10x

Allocate only 1-3% of our deposit for each trade

Truth be told, as cool as Sharkey is with its load of features, its devs have a track record of bad decisions. Cuddling up with Mastodon and bringing Sharkey closer to it isn't even the worst one. Ask ().
Maybe Iceshrimp is worth a look, too, for those used to Twitter. Of course, people who want to leave or have left something entirely different should be taken to something entirely different like Lemmy, Mbin or PieFed for Redditors and Friendica, Hubzilla and (streams) for Faceboook users.
CC:
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Sharkey #Iceshrimp #Lemmy #Mbin #PieFed #Friendica #Hubzilla #Streams #(streams) Judging by the advice I've read so far, it's always best to describe the colour using basic colours plus attributes such as brightness, saturation and what other basic colour or colours the colour you describe is leaning towards.
For example, "light, yellowish orange", "a darker, slightly less saturated, slightly more brownish tone of orange", "various shades of slightly yellowish, medium-light-to-medium brown", "a solid, slightly pale medium blue with a minimal hint of green", "a medium-dark wood texture, slightly reddish, slightly greyish". All actually used by me in the long descriptions in (content warning: eye contact) .
If the name of the colour plays a role, use it and then describe the colour in the same way as above. Blind or visually-impaired people may not know what Prussian blue or Burgundy red looks like.
What do you say, is that appropriate, complete overkill or still insufficient
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #ImageDescription #ImageDescriptions #ImageDescriptionMeta #CWImageDescriptionMetaTo my surprise, indexes instances of more Fediverse server apps than I thought.
What I've found so far, other than hundreds upon hundreds of Mastodon instances:

One could suppose that all these server applications have taken active steps to become more compatible with Mastodon, but I've got my doubts that standard support for any Mastodon API is sufficient, and that they all have gone beyond API support.
Some things that I've yet to see on the list for the first time:

Still, their not only only seem to work on Mastodon, but it seems to be only possible to add Mastodon accounts and nothing else. It says a lot that is completely empty.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Pixelfed #Firefish #Sharkey #Catodon #GoToSocial #micro.blog #Friendica #Mitra #Misskey #Iceshrimp #Iceshrimp.NET #Pleroma #Akkoma #Hubzilla #Streams #(streams) #Forte #Threadiverse #Lemmy #Mbin #PieFed #FediDevs
we would just move on and let the forks pick up where he'd left off.

You don't even need Mastodon forks to stay in the Fediverse.
There's enough stuff in the Fediverse that can do the same things as Mastodon, that's fully connected to and federated with Mastodon, but that isn't Mastodon, that has never been Mastodon, that isn't affliliated with Mastodon, and that outshines Mastodon as well as its forks in many ways.
(Sent from .)
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Mastodon #NotOnlyMastodon #FediverseIsNotMastodon #MastodonIsNotTheFediverse

BB/USDT

Leverage: 20-75x
Entry Targets:
0.5220
0.5000
Take-Profit Target :
1)0.540
2)0.550
3)0.580
4)0.620

Stop-Loss 0.480

Here's some good advice: Don't use the quotation marks on your keyboard in alt-text! They may be mistaken for control characters. I've seen alt-text being cut off at the first quotation mark, for example. Or they may be rendered incorrectly otherwise.
Use typographically correct quotation marks instead.
For English alt-text, that's and .
Windows: Alt+0147 and Alt+0148.
*nix: 3rd level+B and 3rd level+N.
For Spanish alt-text, that's and .
Windows: Alt+0171 and Alt+0187.
*nix: 3rd level+X and 3rd level+Z.
Alternatively, use the character map application of your operating system. Or copy-paste them from this comment.
If that's all too inconvenient, and you absolutely must use what's on the keyboard, use what amounts to single quotes: '.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #AltText #AltTextMeta #CWAltTextMeta #FediTips Loops is very far from finished. It's in a very early state, it has only got one instance, that instance is experimental, and it doesn't federate with anything else yet.
Just because has announced it, doesn't mean it's a fully-featured, rock-solid, daily-driver-material version 1.0 stable release. Welcome to the world of free and open-source software.
Also, as far as I've seen, many Pixelfed accounts seem to be set to private so you can't look at them from outside as a non-user and follow them by only clicking. You're probably asked to register an account because you have to be logged in with a Pixelfed account on that particular instance to be allowed to see these private accounts.
The only way to see what they post is by following them, by copying their ID or their account URL and pasting it into your search. And then you can see what they'll post from that point on.
CC:
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Loops #Pixelfed 2008. When launched Identi.ca.
After all, Mastodon started out as an alternative frontend for GNU social. GNU social is a fork of StatusNet. StatusNet, in turn, was the software which Identi.ca used to run on until it was merged into GNU social in 2013. (Evan first launched Identi.ca, and then he open-sourced the technology under the name of Laconi.ca, later StatusNet.)
This also means that the OStatus protocol is part of Mastodon's history as well. OStatus is the protocol that GNU social was based on back in the day and probably still is, that later versions of StatusNet were based on, and that Mastodon was originally based on. It's the successor to OpenMicroBlogging, the protocol that Identi.ca was launched on, and that early StatusNet was based on. But it was gone when Mastodon was launched.
It's also fair to mention Friendica, the Facebook alternative launched by Mike Macgirvin in 2010, and Hubzilla, the "federated social content management system" which, in 2015, emerged from something that Mike himself had forked off Friendica in 2012.
Both speak a whole lot of protocols. Hubzilla used to speak OStatus, Friendica still does. And so, when the very first Mastodon test release came out in early 2016, and the very first Mastodon instance was started up, it was immediately able to connect to GNU social, Friendica and Hubzilla.
It's an important part of Mastodon's history that Mastodon has never in its history been an isolated walled garden, that Mastodon has never in its history been connected to only itself.
Speaking of Hubzilla, it should be mentioned once again, namely in 2017.
The very first Fediverse project to implement ActivityPub was Hubzilla in July. Mastodon followed in September. These two were the only Fediverse projects that adopted ActivityPub before it was declared a standard. And so, for quite a while, it was only these two that could use ActivityPub to connect to each other (while still also being able to do so via OStatus, by the way). But since both have vastly different philosophies, actual compatibility was and still is limited.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Identi.ca #StatusNet #OStatus #Mastodon #Friendica #Hubzilla #ActivityPub #FediverseHistory 2022 glaubte man noch, "das Metaverse" sei Horizons. Alias "Facebooks Metaverse", alias "Zuckerbergs Metaverse", alias "Meta Metaverse". Die virtuellen 3-D-Welten, die Mark Zuckerberg 2021 angekndigt hat, und zwar als "das Metaverse". Nur leider konnte er sich den Begriff wohl nicht exklusiv schtzen lassen.
2024 glaubt man, "das Metaverse" sei die Gesamtheit der bekannten Meta-Platforms-Produkte: Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Threads. Horizons ist lngst wieder in Vergessenheit geraten. Man glaubt also, "das Metaverse" hat gar nichts mit 3-D-Welten zu tun.
Tatschlich ist "Metaverse" ein Begriff aus Neal Stephensons 1991er Cyberpunk-Roman Snow Crash: eine riesige virtuelle Welt, die vom damaligen Internet inspiriert war. Snow Crash hat brigens Philip Rosedale dazu inspiriert, Second Life zu bauen, das wiederum Ernest Cline dazu inspiriert hat, Ready Player One zu schreiben.
Aus IEEE-Kreisen gibt es tatschlich .
In Verbindung mit tatschlich existierenden virtuellen Welten wird "Metaverse" seit sptestens 2007 regulr verwendet, und zwar von der Community um , eine freie, quelloffene, serverseitige Reimplementation der Technologie von Second Life. Das kam Anfang 2007 raus, im Sommer startete das erste ffentliche Grid, , und enthlt schon den Claim, den das OSgrid heute noch verwendet: "The Open Source Metaverse".

#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #LangerPost #CWLangerPost #VirtuelleWelten #Horizons #HorizonWorlds #OpenSim #OpenSimulator #OSgrid #Metaverse #MetaversumDer Standard ist eigentlich PascalCase: Erster Buchstabe von jedem Wort ist gro. CamelCase wre eher "camelCase", also erster Buchstabe des ersten Wortes klein, erster Buchstabe von allen anderen Wrtern gro. Aber das ist fr die, die zu faul sind, Grobuchstaben zu schreiben.
Am elegantesten sieht natrlich ein Hashtag aus mehreren Wrtern aus. Zumindest auf Hubzilla, (streams) und Forte kann man ihn mit Anfhrungszeichen generieren: #"The Prodigy". In der Darstellung verschwinden dann die Anfhrungszeichen, und man sieht einen durchgngig linkenden Hashtag mit mehreren Wrtern. Eventuell geht das auch auf Friendica.
Ich wei jetzt allerdings nicht, wie gut das in Screenreadern funktioniert. Vorlesen knnen sie das definitiv, aber das Risiko besteht, da sie einen Hashtag aus mehreren Wrtern nicht als Hashtag aus mehreren Wrtern erkennen und nur das erste Wort als Teil des Hashtags erkennen.
In der Mastodon-Suche spielt das brigens keine Rolle. Beim Indizieren von Hashtags schmeit Mastodon alle Zeichen raus, die auf Mastodon in Hashtags nicht funktionieren. #TheProdigy, #The-Prodigy und #"The Prodigy" (das dann ja zu #The Prodigy wird) sind im Suchindex von Mastodon alle gleichermaen #TheProdigy.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #LangerPost #CWLangerPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Friendica #Hubzilla #Streams #(streams) #Forte #Hashtag #Hashtags #HashtagMeta #CWHashtagMeta #ScreenReader #A11y #Accessibility #Barrierefreiheit #FediTips No, because I'd technically make them unfollow me, too.
, where I am (and which I'm commenting from right now, so it's very much part of the Fediverse and connected to Mastodon), is much more like Facebook and not at all like Twitter. It doesn't have that distinction between followers and followed. It only has mutual connections like Facebook friends.
So if I "unfollow" someone, read, disconnect from someone, I also renounce the permission I have given them to receive my posts. I don't remove myself from their follow list, but I don't send them any content anymore. It's like rejecting a previously confirmed follow request on Mastodon.
What I do instead is filter their reposts/boosts/renotes/repeats out, using a line of filter syntax. verb == Announce into the blacklist for that particular contact (I've got per-connection filters), and there's silence. Over on , I even have a dedicated switch for that per contact.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Boost #Boosts #Boosting #Hubzilla #Streams #(streams) #Filter #FediTips
I feel interested. I tried reading more about nomadic identity, but still couldnt really figure things out, and I didnt use Nomad-based platforms before. Techdoc is too technical to understand. Could you explain what nomadic identity would look like in practice

Maybe can answer your questions.
What possibilities would AP user have and how would it compare to existing solutions, like Mastodon's account migration

For end users, nomadic identity is currently only available on Hubzilla and (streams), using two versions of the Nomad protocol which has been geared towards and built around nomadic identity since its very beginnings in 2011. Nomadic identity via ActivityPub is still in closed, non-public testing.
Now, let's suppose the whole Fediverse had nomadic identity at its full extent.
Moving your identity using nomadic identity would go well beyond Mastodon's account migration:

But that's only the very basics. And it's a side-effect of the real power of nomadic identity: You can have clones of your whole identity with everything that comes with it on other servers. Not dumb copies, but near-real-time, live, hot, bidirectional backups.
A fully nomadic Fediverse will see your identity as only one identity, no matter how many clones you have. That's because your clones have the same identity as your main instance.
You can use the main instance of your identity, and whatever happens there will almost immediately be sent to your clones. You can use any of your clones just as well, and whatever happens there will almost immediately be sent to your main instance and your other clones.
If the server with your main instance goes down, you still have your clones, and you can carry on. You lose nothing.
You can also make one of your clones your new main instance which will demote your previous main instance to a clone. This is useful if the server with your main instance has gone offline and will not come back. You can simply declare one of your clones your new main instance. This will change your ID because it will adopt the domain of the server with your new main instance on it, but all your contacts will be changed accordingly, even on their side.
That is, I'm not quite sure how well nomadic identity will work on stuff that isn't Hubzilla or (streams) or Forte, server applications where your identity is bound to and directly stored in your account.
It works so well on Hubzilla, (streams) and Forte because they don't do that. They don't put your identity, your connections, your content etc. directly into your account. They put it into a container which they call a . You can have as many of these channels on the same account as you want. And these channels are fairly easy to clone from server to server.
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Hubzilla #Streams #(streams) #Forte #NomadicIdentity

The Long Drive

It's funny. It is a drive that I have done plenty of times. Tomorrow I will do the usual twelve hour drive from Switzerland to around Alicante, and I will do so with minimal stops.

In essence the drive is easy. I take the motorway from Nyon all the way to Ondara, with a small segment on open roads around Grenoble. It's long, but easy.

There is a difficulty that I face. I always do this drive alone. Whilst it gives me the freedom to drive at my speed, stop when I want to and more, it also reminds me that I am still solitary. I always feel a little fragile before a trip, especially one like this.

If I was going to Barcelona it would be an easy eight hour drive, but to go towards Ondara is a twelve hour drive. That's twelve hours of podcasts, audio books and more. With a good audio book the drive is easy.

Some people would stop along the way, and I have considered it. I don't know where I would stop. If I stopped I could break the journey in two, but would that increase fatigue over two days

In reality this drive is a fun challenge. It's liberating to drive for twelve hours, and to listen to an audio book from cover to cover. it's fun to travel through three countries in a car like this. From the road to Grenoble in the dark to the sunrise near Valence to getting to see the Motorway after Marseille, to the wind and more as I head to the Spanish border, and then the congestion around Barcelona, before the quieter roads toward Valencia and beyond. The road is familiar, and it has memories.

It would be nice to do this trip as a person in a relationship, rather than solo. I was reading The Midnight Library and this is one of those situations. When I travel my subconscious feels the presence of the book of regrets, so rather than excitement I feel regret until I start to drive, and then I feel the adrenaline of the open road. It's the waiting for a trip that plays with us.

Yesterday I spoke to someone who said doing this trip solo would be boring. That's why podcasts and audio books are good.

I considered taking the bike but that adds a layer of complexity. This time is different. I have my climbing stuff with me. If an occasion to climb comes up then I can take that opportunity to do something a little different.

I think the problem is that I have too much time to think before a trip. If I had no time to think about the journey I'd be excited, and impatient. I should be excited and impatient. I will read most of Nexus, in theory. I finished Sapiens while eating lunch today.

Tomorrow I drive a familiar road that is one thousand two hundred kilometres long. In the US such a distance is ordinary. In Europe it's less ordinary.

#contemplation #drive #endurance #long #reading

AVA/USDT

Leverage: 20-75x
Entry Targets:
2.32
2.28
Take-Profit Target :
1)2.45
2)2.55
3)2.70
4)3.20

Stop-Loss: 2.00

TURBO/USDT

Leverage: 20-75x
Entry Targets:
0.01107
0.01000
Take-Profit Target :
1)0.01200
2)0.01300
3)0.01500
4)0.01800

Stop-Loss: 0.009400

MOODENG/USDT

Leverage: 20-75x
Entry Targets:
0.358
0.330
Take-Profit Target :
1)0.370
2)0.390
3)0.420
4)0.450

Stop-Loss: 0.300
MOODENG/USDT

Dolphins In Depth: Was signing Odell Beckham a mistake for Miami

XRP/USDT

Entry price : - 2.45 - 2.35

(SCALP)
Target 1: 2.50
Target 2: 2.60
Target 3: 2.70

(SWING TRADE)
Target 1: 2.75
Target 2: 3.20

Stop loss : 2.25

Leverage: 5x

Allocate only 1-3% of our deposit for each trade

Attention-Worthy Links for December 13th, 2024

-term -rays

Until the people behind FediDevs honestly try to fix it by adding compatibility with the rest of the Fediverse, I'll consider this an act of intentional discrimination against everything that isn't Mastodon and keeping the non-Mastodon server apps and their users out of everything they do.
It isn't like the FediDevs people don't know that there is more to the Fediverse than Mastodon. They do know. At least some do. There is that did work with Mastodon and other Fediverse server apps. But it hasn't been used in nine months.
At the same time, the FediDevs website is clearly not built against any Mastodon API. If it was, then server apps that have the same API implemented would work with it. But the only non-Mastodon thing I've seen slip through is one watched Catodon instance. Catodon uses Iceshrimp's technology to mimic Mastodon, so I guess it happens to be close enough.
For the whole thing looks like built against Mastodon's inner workings without the use of any API. Why would someone build it like that Either it's cluelessness. It definitely wasn't cluelessness. At least someone had to have knowledge of a Fediverse outside of Mastodon see the Friendica group.
Or it's intentional malice. It's like someone is secretly waging war against everything in the Fediverse that is not Mastodon. That seems to be why the Friendica group was abandoned, namely in order to stop using and thus promoting something that isn't Mastodon.
And FediDevs looks like it was built the way it was built in order to make bloody sure it will always stay a Mastodon-exclusive thing by making it as incompatible with the rest of the Fediverse as possible, at least probably without as blatantly obvious means as rejecting user agents. The "Fedi" in the name is the cherry on top to a) drive the point home that the Fediverse is (or should be) only Mastodon and b) flip the bird at the non-Mastodon Fediverse.
The whole backend code seems to be built against Mastodon directly also to make it as difficult as possible to add compatibility with other Fediverse server applications because that would require the whole backend to be redesigned and rewritten from the ground up.
I'd really like the FediDevs staff to prove me wrong by actually opening their site to the non-Mastodon Fediverse.
CC:
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Mastodon #FediDevs

/USDT

ZONE: 28.80 - 28.22
LEVERAGE: Isolated 20x
Targets:
1) 29.02
2) 29.38
3) 29.66
4) 29.95
5) 30.24
6) 30.53

STOPLOSS: 27.48

it's not what most former Bluesky users would be looking for, exactly.

They're looking for a drop-in replacement of pre-Musk Twitter. For one, Misskey and the Forkeys are actually closer to pre-Musk Twitter in UX than Mastodon.
Besides, if you keep doing what has been done for almost three years now, railroad everyone to Mastodon without even telling them that there's more to the Fediverse than Mastodon in order to keep things simple, you'll end up with even more people who spend months or years in Mastodon-only bubbles. Who then get used to a Fediverse which allegedly is only Mastodon.
Who end up very irritated and defensive of their "Mastodon Fediverse" when an alleged "intruder" that's nothing like Mastodon shows up in their timeline.
And who try hard to force non-Mastodon users to abandon their own culture, only adopt Mastodon's culture, use whatever they're on exactly like Mastodon and stop using any features that Mastodon 3 didn't have because Mastodon's entire culture is defined by Mastodon 3's features.
Trust me, it really is that bad. I'm a Hubzilla user. I speak from personal experience.
CC:
#Long #LongPost #CWLong #CWLongPost #FediMeta #FediverseMeta #CWFediMeta #CWFediverseMeta #Fediverse #Mastodon #Misskey #Forkey #Forkeys #NotOnlyMastodon #FediverseIsNotMastodon #MastodonIsNotTheFediverse