My university had student apartments, each had their own router. No weird rules since it wasn't the university's network at all, it belonged to whoever lived in the apartment. Full router access, connect whatever, put it in bridge mode and connect your own if you want.
It's a wet morning and the inside of your windshield is fogged up. (Or it's cold and there's frost on the inside)
To many, federation is a solution to a problem that doesn't really exist for them. In their mind, the early model of federation is like email, a problem that was "solved" years ago by having one corporate product that was much better than others (Gmail).
To add, on top of that, the fediverse is like if gmail could just randomly decide to stop receiving emails from outlook addresses and there's nothing any user can do about it except make another email for when they want to email outlook users.
I don't think fediverse proponents know just how catastrophically this terminates their entire pitch in the minds of 99% of internet users
I'm saying that if there aren't enough players to sustain a multiplayer game globally you're not going to find people to play with locally.
Palestine didn't kill those hostages, Hamas did. Hamas deserves to die, innocents do not, and killing innocents to reach the bad guy is not justified
We couldn't go out
Why the hell not? Lots of via rail lines across the country have random little stops out in the bush so people can get on and off. There was no reason to not open the doors and let people walk around.
@ngwoo
@lemmy.world