

Really? I thought that you might be among the first.


Really? I thought that you might be among the first.


The graphs are about the first 100/100/30 days of the conflicts, respectively.


Careful, you might get banned from PieFed.
Don’t the greybeards still have quite a bit of dialogue? Also, both the player & Miraak are quite talkative, from what I rember, though it makes sense why the latter wouldn’t care much about collateral damage.
I think that Bethesda should just stop shipping main quests with their 1st party games. I think that there are even mods to disable them, which should be somewhat telling about players’ opinions.
Skyrim SE (the remake) is just about a decade old. Mods have progressed a lot if you want to give it a try.
I think that says a lot about how memorable he is.


A microkernel wouldn’t be that useful without a stable module interface, which won’t be coming anytime soon.
I think that I’ve only started the questline only a few times, and only for the empire, I think. I’m not even sure if I’ve finished it or ever met Ulfric.
Is the questline good? I fear that it’s too main questy, and Bethesda can’t write a good main quest to save their lives.
Isn’t Ulfric optional? I don’t think the civil war is required for the main quest.
So that others don’t have to look it up, it’s “Chistian Heritage Party of Canada”.
Theoretically you could just strap
microphoneslasers to all themajor sealifesharks.
I’m not sure what the correct terms are, so I’ll refer to in-app/in-client notifications as internal notifications and mobile-style out-of-app notifications as external notifications.
Based on what people usually refer to with the word “notification” in the context of social applications and messaging services, and your comment, I’m assuming you’re talking about external notifications. If you mean all notifications in general, I’ve misunderstood your point and can ignore the rest of this comment. I do think that internal notifications are useful.
I’m not saying that external notifications are useless, but rather that I don’t feel that they’re as important as you seem to make it out to be.
Also, even if your Lemmy client doesn’t support external notifications, Lemmy supports RSS, which you can subscribe to with a different application.
It should probably facilitate discussions then
Discussions do not have to be between only two people, others can continue where someone else left off.
People often need to continue conversations to clarify information & elaborate…
This is true, but it doesn’t require notifications outside of the client. For example, I noticed your reply as Lemmy’s web UI showed that I had an unread message.
I don’t mind continuing a discussion over multiple days, though I’m not sure if this applies to everyone.
Shades of Mastodon users justifying suicidal design choices that were later rolled back here.
Could you elaborate? I don’t use Mastodon, as I don’t see the value in “micro-blogging” and prefer to follow topics rather than people.
As for the rest of your comment, I too disagree with blocking VPNs & Tor to fix their CSAM problem, but I don’t see how that is relevant to this discussion? Though I do not mind if you want to discuss that instead.
Notifications are actually very important for people who treat platforms interchangeably.
How so? At least, I don’t think that they’re important to Lemmy, as it’s not about real-time person-to-person communication, but rather discussion about topics.


You can also greatly reduce the amount of hallucinations by switching from back-alley drugs to over-the-counter ones.
No problem, happy to help!
I’m not sure how or if Piefed’s UI shows it, but posts are written in Markdown.
When you add an image, text gets added to your post or comment in the following format: . So, in your post the “image” is just the string , which clients (Lemmy’s & Piefed’s web UI and applications) replace with the actual image.
So, if your post/comment editor has an option with something like “source”, “plain text” or “Markdown” in the name, you can enter a description for the image in the brackets right after the exclamation mark.
Fixed image example: 
The alt text is used by things like screen readers, and even normal browsers, if the image fails to load. So, something like the following might be better:
Logo of Unfinished Projects, with the tagline “In solidarity we can build a future that benefits us all”
If anything is still unclear, I’m happy to answer any questions you may have.
Edit: Lemmy keeps “fixing” “https://media.piefed.zip/posts/bT/UD/bTUDGZRAcKZdXyO.png” to a proxied url for some reason. If you copy the Markdown from this comment, please fix it on your end, as I can’t seem to on mine.
A small nitpick, but could you do something about the image alt text in your post? A filename, especially a non descriptive one, is not exactly great for accessibility.
Maybe I have to play trough the story again.