It also might draw negative attention from Reddit admins and be considered spam. Unsure tbh. The automod that replies to users as it deletes their comments does link here. This community is seemingly handling the transition pretty well so I'm kinda glad I took the admittedly heavy-handed approach I did. I think in the long run it's preventing the community from fragmenting too much.
https://lemmyverse.net/ is the most complete list you're likely to find since it uses a crawler to find federated instances and their communities from an initial seed list of known instances. So unless an instance is defederated from all of the instances in their seed list then it should appear on there. It also counts subscriber numbers, etc. as a sum across all the instances it finds, which should give a sense of where the majority of the community are gathered if there are duplicates.
I can do scheduled posts, so yes. Just need to find some time to do it properly rather than rush it. Similarly with running another poll as some people are calling for, though the numbers of people complaining are pretty small compared to the activity here.
Really clean, great work.
The restricted mode only technically prevents new posts, I just have an automod rule to delete new comments (except for on the poll discussion threads). You probably got a notification even though the comment was immediately removed by automod. That'd be my guess. That or it was a reply on an unrestricted thread.
But why do you need glue? It's got an EC11 footprint, solder it to that.
Okay, just saw your edit. What's stopping you from just modifying the PCB in kicad and swapping a switch footprint, rather than bodging it?
Anyway, yeah, dremmeling out a choc bottom sounds a reasonable solution. Or just be careful and only glue the perimeter
It looks like it fits the standard EC11 footprint. Surely it'll just mount to the PCB directly.
I would love an app that like, subdivides my screen into a grid that I can use to just automatically jump to a place with just my keyboard, that would be perfect.
IIRC it doesn't need a display, it's a Web-based UI that you can use from another computer on the network if it doesn't have a display, VNC would be overkill. Maybe they changed that.
There is a more performant C++ implementation but it's been a long while since I've used either it or the java implementation. Worth checking out.
I think you forgot the image. I think lemmy let's you edit the post and add it though.