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Am I the only one unable to open that website ?


It half-opened for me, bogged down, and on re-load crashed the Firefox tab.


had the same experience, even in private windows without any plugin. People really goes to great length to make sure their text is unreadable for some of their users.


Funnily enough, it works "great" on Librewolf (with quote around "great" because that design is awful, eating most of the screen estate with a fixed menu)


Yeah unfortunately it breaks Firefox for me.


This is awesome. I should copy that for https://offpunk.net


Kagi Assistants to become avalailable to all users this week.

I was also confused, the title is very misleading and US-centric.


Really sad to not be able to read this thing without Javascript


That's cause you're not web3, bro /s

https://internetcomputer.org/#:~:text=build%20web3%20social%...

Reading https://taggr.link/#/whitepaper was a similar "I'm obviously not cool enough for what's happening here"


The fact that we close bookstores instead of opening them is telling everything you need to know about our society.


No one has time for a book but has plenty of time for social media, sadly


Switching to Vibram Fivefingers in 2009 allowed me to continue to run as it solved multiple periostite and knee injuries I had done to myself while running with "normal shoes".

I still really like Vibram but I’m forced to wear them less and less for one single reason: the smell!

I’m still ashamed for that time where I boarded a plane while wearing my vibram. For whatever reason, we had to wait 5 minutes outside before boarding. It was raining. My vibram were soaked. Then I went to the plane, sate dow and… the smell started to appear.

Sorry everyone for that… I’m never wearing Vibram when traveling anymore.


I find Grans Remedy powder does a great job if you apply it every time!


Any source? I’m interested!


https://proton.me/blog/mail-calendar-product-roadmap-winter

> To support much-requested features like tasks, search capabilities, and offline access, we’ve started work on our next generation of Proton Calendar apps for iOS and Android, which we aim to release toward the end of 2025.


That guys made it to the top of the Bell Curve…

https://mamot.fr/@ploum/113044736819173509


When I read the blog was 10.000 lines of code and there was a long list of busswordesques technologies implied, I thought this was a parody.

Reading that it crashes or eat the CPU for some people, I still believe it somewhat is. It also displays very badly on my own Firefox (with very recent computer).

And I could not find a list of all posts.

I mean… My own blog is a 500 lines python script without any external dependency. It has 42 lines of CSS. And it is all contained, content included, in one git repository. It has a list of all the blog posts you can quickly scroll through. It displays the same on every single computer/browser/smartphone, even very slow connection on old hardware. (sources are here : https://sr.ht/~lioploum/ploum.net/ )

But I’m not an experienced web dev.


— Stop linking to Twitter/X !

— But that’s where the information is.

— Stop linking to Twitter/X, here’s a Fediverse link with more information.

— But it has fewer engagement.

— Stop linking to Twitter/X, here’s a Fediverse link with more information and more engagement.

— …

— OK, at some point, you need to recognize that you are the problem.


Why “stop linking to X”?

Why does posting there make a user a “problem”?

Who’s the judge of what’s a “problem” and what are the criteria, I wonder.


> Why “stop linking to X”?

As someone without a Twitter/X account, their links are bad. I can only see the first post of a chain, can't see replies, etc. Mastodon is better in that regard.

This has nothing to do with the content of the platform, Musk, etc, btw. It's just the fact that now it's a bit hostile for logged out users/people without accounts. It used to be fine, but now it hides content, which is bad for me.


Yep, exactly. Twitter makes no sense at all from the perspective of a non-user. Posts are all over the place, no coherent order.

It only motivates me to avoid the platform.


> It used to be fine

It was always awful, in my opinion. Twitter does a good job at letting people publish "sound bytes"; little bits of what's on their mind. Past that (into longer form and discussion) it has never been good.


Right, it was never a good platform for longer posts, but before at least you could try to follow the different posts. Now, public links only show one post and that's it.


As someone without account, I was able to read post and comments before. Now I can't even read the post sometimes not talking about comments.


It shows you the linked post and its content just fine. If you want to engage in the conversation, you should probably just go through the account creation process which takes anywhere from 10 seconds to a minute.


> Why “stop linking to X”?

Clicking on almost any of the UI elements leads to a log in prompt, without showing anything else. For people without accounts (or those who don't want to make one), that's probably not functionally different from dropping a link to some forum that requires registration, albeit in this case I guess at least the main post is visible.

The Mastodon link in comparison has the discussion visible up front, which is nice to see! Now whether the fediverse is popular enough to actually have good discussions, that's a bit harder to say, but at least it's something!

I think Facebook also had similar issues, where it gates a lot of things behind a login prompt, quite user hostile, though also understandable why they'd do it that way.


The business scheme is perfectly valid. It’s the same on Instagram as well.

I don’t have an Instagram account and don’t see a reason to create one, but my friends can still link me pictures or videos that I can look at. If I want to engage in any way or read past the couple top comments, I need to create an account.

Showing the user what they came for is a good way to get free advertisement, but requiring them to create an account to actually use the platform is perfectly reasonable.


The UX to people without accounts is actively hostile. That's why.

If someone was telling me to look up information from a print edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica from the 1970s, I'd have the same problem: it is an absurd thing to ask of me because there are better, more frictionless ways to obtain the information.


Why stop linking there? X hides threads. If you click a link, you can't see a thread. If you are logged in you can see it, but you can't see it if you aren't logged in. So, you can one little post, and frequently you miss a lot of other information in the replies. See ANY post on where the person is posting more than one single post. Basically, if you link to a post there, the person reading it usually won't get the full story.

Why is posting there make the user a problem? Because, if the user is trying to communicate something, they are choosing a platform that isn't interested in making it effective at communication. A closed off community isn't the town square it claims to be. If you are communication on that site, you can be sure people directed aren't getting the full story.

Who's the judge? Me. I am the judge of what a problem is. So is the parent poster you were replying to. They are also a judge. It's odd that you hand off opinions to others and don't make your own.


X can simply be the town square without you. Nobody is forced to participate.


Reading anything on Twitter is (subjectively) miserable. The platform is good only for since thoughts / sound bytes; not long articles (spread across many posts) and discussions. It's _worse_ if you don't use an account so you can't see anything but the first post... but it's awful even if you can see the whole thing.

I don't know who was the first moron who decided to post the first "long form writeup" on a platform that only supports blurbs... but I am absolutely amazed that people thought it was a good idea and followed suit.


1. You will notice Hacker News does not require a login to view content - this simple approach is a big reason why twitter links are looked down upon. The platform used to foster simple sharing, and now does not. It is in effect, telling you to stop sharing things publicly and only with twitter users.

2. Because you are basically linking to a deep link in the dark web.

3. We all get to make our own decisions, and the person calling out shitty websites that you should not bring to the group has my support.


Because you are limited to view only particular single tweet. And if it's a thread (which is just dumb use of the platform itself) you are out of luck.

For better or for worse at least you can view this single tweet now, but right after Musk took over he blocked all access without account which was just annoying.

Imagine if HN would require you to have account browse and read it. That's what's mostly happened to twitter (and happens to the rest of our benevolent overlords/social platforms like fb and instagram, to which regular web migrated with the information :/)


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