This meat suit I woke up in once, I’ve had it as long as I can remember
Greetings from great nation of Pottsylvania. I go where and do what Fearless Leader tells. Am master of disguise and aliases. I will have great success as long as moose and squirrel do not interfere
This meat suit I woke up in once, I’ve had it as long as I can remember
You could try ZeroTier. I’ve not used it personally, but it’s free if you host your own instance. Your traffic gets routed through that VM, and everything behaves like it’s on the same LAN
If your browser supports uBlock Origin you can use it to block an instance. Basically just add something like this under ‘My Filters’:
lemmy.one##.post-listing:has-text(@hexbear.net)
Where ‘lemmy.one’ is the instance you’re browsing from, and ‘@hexbear.net’ is the instance you wish to block. The ‘@’ prefix is necessary
Credit to this post
If you click the 3 vertical dots, it should expand to reveal a star-icon option that’ll allow you to save the comment. To view saved comments, click on your username in the upper right, then profile. There should be a ‘Saved’ tab
One other helpful snippet that’ll let you filter out posts that link to wsj, twitter, youtube, etc… lemmy.world##a[href*=“wsj.com”]
I’m no ublock expert, but I’ve mostly tested these filters, so ymmv. If you run into any issues or need to tweak a filter please follow up so we can all share 😀
I think it may be down to the UI, for example I preferred Relay for Reddit over the other offerings because the UI just felt more natural to me and that of course always going to be down to the individual user
Ublock will let you block just about anything, for instance if you’re seeing too many posts from a specific instance ex: @leddit.danmark.party, this filter will block the entire instance lemmy.world##.post-listing:has-text(@leddit.danmark.party)
Credit to this post and @[email protected] via @sp6
Had a similar issue with tlp recently. I just happened to notice the laptop battery was at 100%, and said it was charging. I double and triple checked the config file, but the tlp-stat -b still showed the thresholds at 90%-100%.
Turns out tlp, at some point, started ignoring /etc/tlp.conf, and was pointing to /etc/default/tlp