The Proton free tier is pretty limited compared to Gmail, in particular for me, you’re only allowed 1 label. The basic paid tier opens up a lot more. They definitely want you to upgrade to the paid tier.
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- 12 Comments
LimitedDuck@septic.winOPto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What non-technical criticisms do you have of the Lemmy/kbin/link aggregator fediverse experience?English
1·2 years agoI would hope in the future we get a more fleshed out version of multireddits. I think it would be a decent solution since I don’t think duplication of communities is a phenomenon that will ever go away.
LimitedDuck@septic.winOPto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What non-technical criticisms do you have of the Lemmy/kbin/link aggregator fediverse experience?English
3·2 years agoJoined on one instance, it went away, had to create a new account on this instance.
That’s a really annoying issue. Not being able to trust an instance to keep your account alive plants the seeds for a centralization problem in the future.
LimitedDuck@septic.winOPto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What non-technical criticisms do you have of the Lemmy/kbin/link aggregator fediverse experience?English
2·2 years agoAgreed, though I think it’s less “we don’t want you here” and more “you’re on your own”. I liken it to Linux in that sense where new users are expected to try harder to learn the ins and outs. The difference is with Linux what you learn can be applied in so many more places in your Linux experience. With Lemmy, once you grasp the technical depth of it there’s not much you can do with it except explain it to another person.
LimitedDuck@septic.winOPto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What non-technical criticisms do you have of the Lemmy/kbin/link aggregator fediverse experience?English
1·2 years agoI agree, though I probably wouldn’t call it marketing or advertising. Maybe just a better and more accessible introduction and onboarding experience.
LimitedDuck@septic.winto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Can we stop talking about that other site that had a migration here?English
2·2 years agoExcept OP is starting a meta discussion about Reddit discussions, not a direct discussion about Reddit. I don’t necessarily agree with OP, but you’ve crafted an artificial contradiction using a false equivalence. I’d be happier if we left the Reddit-tier logic back where it belongs.
LimitedDuck@septic.winto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What got you into selfhosting and what was the first thing that you hosted?English
2·2 years agoAre you still using it? I went through many deployments before I finally thought I had it settled.
LimitedDuck@septic.winto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What got you into selfhosting and what was the first thing that you hosted?English
8·2 years agoAt the beginning of the pandemic I looked into ways to de-Google and found Nextcloud. It wasn’t the easiest thing to start with, especially for a novice, but I had the time and the hardware, and I’m the type to not mind jumping into something difficult if it means solving a specific problem. I then found out about Bitwarden and had a great experience setting that up. After that I was confident enough to try hosting anything I could find. It’s been good times ever since 😀
LimitedDuck@septic.winto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Guide to Self-Hosting Lemmy with Individual Containers & Existing NGINX Instance.English
10·2 years agoThis is extremely valuable, thanks for this!
As a general question, why did you decide to use a single postgres container for multiple services instead of multiple, stack specific containers? When I first started working with containers I considered your scheme for the sake of minimalism, but didn’t want a single container to bring down multiple unrelated services. I also had the resources to accomodate the redundancy.
LimitedDuck@septic.winto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What's with the corporate obsession with customer feedback?English
1·2 years agoFeedback on what works lets businesses allocate resources to things that will get new/keep current customers and save in places that don’t matter as much. It’s the core principle of any business and everything else, while useful and important in its own way, is secondary.
Now whether or not it feels like businesses are acting on that feedback in a way that makes a difference is a whole other beast.
This would be a good thing, though I think it’s trickier than it appears: