A growing number of people are experimenting with federated alternatives to social media like Mastodon, either by joining an “instance” hosted by someone else or creating their own instance by running the free, open-source software on a server they control. (See more about this movement and joining....
Not Boston Dynamics, but a copy cat robotics company.
INFP = I Need Four People
Dr. Robert Zubrin with a brilliant answer to "Why Should We Go To Mars?"
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
I sure do hope Dr. Zubrin lives to see the day humans set foot on Mars.
Yeah, this doesn't include community posts. I haven't tried finding one tho
All youtube channels have their own feeds, but they're not obvious to find. The first part of the URL looks like this:
undefined
https://www.youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=
Go to the channel's home page and search the page source for "channel_id=" (with a long string of numbers and letters after it, often starting with a "U") then paste the ID after the equal sign. The channel id looks something like this: UCtwKon9qMt5YLVgQt1tvJKg
Inoreader has an "Load full content" button (and hotkey) that loads the body of text without having to visit the page.
Immercenary for 3DO. Such a strange game.
https://www.rpgfan.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Immercenary-Screenshot-004.jpg
Last year the EFF published this "legal primer" for people hosting Fediverse instances
Two important notes: (1) This guide is focused on legal risks that flow from hosting other people’s content, under U.S. law. In general, the safe harbors and immunities discussed below will not protect you if you are directly infringing copyright or defaming someone. (2) Many of us at EFF are lawyers, but we are not YOUR lawyers. This guide is intended to offer a high-level overview of U.S. law and should not be taken as legal advice specific to your particular situation.