nova-ayashi
nova-ayashi
𐕣 C M D R ā–‘ NOVA 𐕣
6K posts
I'm a darksynth artist, sometimes-digital-art creator, & author of constantly developing works. [Website] [Akkoma] [Discord] [Patreon] [Liberapay]previously known via tumblr as cyberlesbiab
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nova-ayashi Ā· 12 hours ago
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It’s been a while since I’ve updated the blogroll on my website, but today I wanted to make sure that I include all of the independently run blogs I read from over on Inoreader. Check it out, here.
Source: Original Post
Posted via Python, written by @daemon_nova
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nova-ayashi Ā· 2 days ago
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I write a lot about social media, a lot about how Bluesky is screwing up because they’re opening the gates to bad actors, or they’re not really decentralized in a sense that anyone can just prop up a server. Or, how Reddit is aggressively pushing their AI upon users via advertisements on their own platform, or how Meta’s AI has gone rogue and is deleting tons of Instagram accounts. But, I see people asking in different communities, how to ā€œget more reactionsā€ to what they post.
So, I want to break this down, because Twitter kind of ruined people’s perception and expectations in regard to what social media is, and is supposed to be. I don’t particularly want to say, ā€œTwitter transformed millions of people into narcissists.ā€ But, the whole entire issue does stem from an embedded kind of selfishness. A view of the social internet wherein a person just cannot see past their own nose.
I’ve written before about how influencers are a parasitic presence on social media, in that they take, take, take, and give nothing back. That’s the mindset we have to fight against here, as we rebuild the internet away from the oligarch-infested corporate internet.
It’s important as a person to realize that when you’re on Bluesky, or Pillowfort, or Mastodon, or any other such platform that’s relatively new, or not entirely enshittified, it’s important that you recognize that you are not a monolith. In the eyes of everyone else posting, you may not even exist to them. You are not owed ā€œengagementā€ or ā€œreactionsā€ just by virtue of posting something.
Sure, people might see things you’re posting, and hey, someone might hit like or fave every once in a while, but if you do nothing, you don’t interact with others, you don’t follow anyone, or, in the reverse, if you follow as many people as possible and your entire feed is just you … people kind of get the hint that you’re not actually interested in being social. You’re just using the input box as an ego-stroker.
And, I can’t stress this enough, this is the most annoying online persona one can have (outside of being a nazi).
Maybe you’d be like, ā€œBut Nova, you don’t interact with people all that much!ā€ Which brings me to yet another point: You don’t have to interact with people. Some of us don’t have the mental energy to be constantly speaking to strangers, or making conversation. That’s fine. That’s how I am. Sometimes I do just want to post and forget. Post what I’m doing, what I’m making, and fall asleep. Maybe follow someone back, fave their comment, give a reply here and there.
But, myself, like some others, I’m pretty low-energy nowadays.
The important thing, is that you don’t get all self righteous about it.
ā€œThis site is dead! I get no engagement!ā€
Maybe your content is boring, maybe it’s just not interesting, what you have to say. Or, maybe you’re using the internet as a diary where you expect to be applauded for every thought you have, like a miniature digital Tom Cruise, with zero quid-pro-quo.
Twitter and the expectations it cultivated, was and were, largely, a mistake. But that doesn’t mean you can’t fix it. So, if you, the reader, find yourself wondering, ā€œIs this site dead? Why is nobody interacting with ME?ā€ Stop and ask yourself, ā€œDo I post like I’m living in the vacuum of space, or do I interact with others in some way, shape, or form? When I see things that I like, do I re-share those things? Do I like and fave? When somebody takes their own personal time to actually speak to me, do I completely ignore them, or respond in a way that signifies that they aren’t wasting finger strength?ā€
As more and more people flee from the algorithm poisoned corporate thunderdomes, it’s my hope that at least one of them find this post and go, ā€œOH! Dang.ā€
Source: Original Post
Posted via Python, written by @daemon_nova
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nova-ayashi Ā· 5 days ago
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Altered the RSS feed on the site (and created a brand new one) to include everything that was already include from the website, and also forum topics created by me, on my forum!
Source: Original Post
Posted via Python, written by @daemon_nova
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nova-ayashi Ā· 6 days ago
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I don’t have time to write a full article with fleshed out explanations, but for those interested in making a switch to ActivityPub (the network that runs Mastodon, among other software), I’ve put together a short list of instances for those unsatisfied with Bluesky’s latest example of not being able to make proper decisions for their community.
labyrinth.zone
app.wafrn.net
void.lgbt
social.translunar.academy
cyberpunk.lol
corteximplant.com
outerheaven.club
retro.pizza
zoner.work
transfem.social
kitsunes.club
miruku.cafe
mk.absturztau.be
Source: Original Post
Posted via Python, written by @daemon_nova
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nova-ayashi Ā· 6 days ago
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I’m sure most people are aware by now that someone signed up on Bluesky under the username @jd-vance-1.bsky.social, and that it was subsequently banned minutes after sign-up … because the team thought it was an impersonation account. Usually, that would be the case, because, as we know, Bluesky’s userbase leans heavily middle-liberal to hard-left, and lots of them love to impersonate political buffoons. But, once they (the Bluesky moderation team) found out it was real, they restored his account and sent an invite to Fox News welcoming him to the platform. Just as Jay said they would, back in May.
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Full article here, if you must read it.
I want to preface this with: No, I’m not saying that ActivityPub and its associated apps, such as Mastodon, are perfect. The network has its issues, and we’re still beating back the tide of indifferent, upper-middle-class tech workers. How can you help? By joining, and offering your voice as a breath of fresh air. Especially now.
But, there is a specific issue with Bluesky that has been the problem from the start.
Back in 2013, right as Gamergate was gearing up to make Twitter the worst social media platform in the world to exist upon, with it being basically the only online social space to exist and express yourself, there were, and still are people who believe that this was when Twitter was at its best. And that also seems to be the takeaway the Bluesky team had when they erected their alternative.
Obviously, Twitter was never really all that good. It was pretty unique and interesting in its original days, but the algorithm ruined that. In fact, algorithms are one of the biggest reasons why corporate social media is bad. And, no, Bluesky does not have an algorithm. But something that was built as a research project within Twitter, pioneered by Jack Dorsey, was always going to lead down a path of eventual destruction.
Bluesky was created in 2019 as a research project within Twitter led by then-CEO Jack Dorsey. It eventually severed ties with Twitter and became an independent company following Musk’s acquisition. The goal with Bluesky was to build a decentralized standard for social media that Twitter could eventually adopt. In that way, Bluesky is comparable to Mastodon in that they both allow for the creation of different servers that interact, and users can move their data and network between servers.
Side note: The problem with Bluesky’s decentralized social leanings, is that actually running a full PDS, wherein your server ingests all of Bluesky, is that it becomes very expensive. Much more expensive than running a Mastodon server.
But, I keep getting side-tracked here. My point in writing this, as in, what I’m trying to convey here, is that building a social platform that is a mere one to one clone of Twitter, but the old days, isn’t good. If you don’t understand this, and your only reference point for badness is when a fascist billionaire buys up influence and an entire platform, you are constructing something that is meant to fail. You aren’t taking away the right lesson, or, you aren’t seeing the bigger picture.
Twitter has mostly always been a terrible place to exist, and Mastodon, Pleroma, Akkoma, Misskey, etc., were not created as an alternative to Twitter. They were created as a place for people to find decentralized, community-driven spaces, as an alternative to all mainstream social platforms. Which is the anti-thesis of an algorithm brained platform, and a paradise for people who hate corporate influence, and ads.
First released in 2016 by Eugen Rochko, Mastodon has positioned itself as an alternative to mainstream social media, particularly for users seeking decentralized, community-driven spaces. The platform has experienced multiple surges in adoption, most notably following the Twitter acquisition by Elon Musk in 2022, as users sought alternatives to Twitter. It is part of a broader shift toward decentralized social networks, including Bluesky and Lemmy.
Via the Mastodon Wiki page.
I know the Wiki mentions that users were seeking alternatives to Twitter, and found Mastodon, but that doesn’t mean that it was specifically created to be an alt-Twitter.
That’s what Bluesky was made to be.
And that’s why they’re taking money from crypto investors.
We led Bluesky's $15M Series A šŸ¦‹ We’re excited to support @bsky.app in their mission to build an open foundation for the social internet and give power back to users. More on our thesis ↓ www.blockchaincapital.com/blog/bluesky... [image or embed]
— Blockchain Capital (@blockchaincapital.com) October 24, 2024 at 12:43 PM
I know I’ve been beating this horse into a pulp, but all of these things are signs that the safety and fun you found during the lockdown days of Bluesky, are oases in the desert of doom, that are quickly drying up. And I’ve presented all of that here for you to see.
But I don’t say this without acknowledging that, despite Bluesky trying to pretend they’re the first at everything in decentralized social media, there have been things they’ve done that have inspired and made waves that aren’t so bad.
Starter Packs took social media by storm. What a cool idea?! Putting people’s accounts together in a ā€œpackā€ that others can browse and mass-follow based on ideas and topics. It was such a cool idea, that someone made a website for starter pack creation, for Mastodon, that’s specifically focused on developers.
And, despite issues with allowing random users to construct block and mute lists for other randoms to follow, this has been, at least, an interesting feature. But, you can���t just say that without acknowledging that there are tons of bad faith blocklists, and that this was maybe never a good idea.
Some people are not meant to be community moderators, and should never have that kind of power.
What else was there that was actually good? Feeds. Feeds are pretty cool. On an app like Mastodon, you have the home feed, the local server feed, and the everywhere all at once feed, and that’s pretty much it. You can construct lists of specific accounts in a use case where you’d like to see updates from a set of specific people, but Bluesky’s integration of feeds to induct and kinda sorta create a user driven ā€œalgorithmā€ was pretty neat.
That’s really it though. In the time I’ve personally spent on Bluesky, I’ve seen repeated harassment campaigns, quote-skeet dunking, dogpiling (wherein large accounts use their followers as weapons against people they don’t like), high school clique behavior, and in-general? Way more toxicity than I’ve ever seen on the ActivityPub network, and even sometimes, more than I used to see even on Twitter, pre-Musk. But this is happening, because this is a symptom of a social network that’s trying to be Twitter, sans Elon Musk.
And heck, I’m starting to think they would gladly invite him to the platform.
But, it really comes down to you, as a user, and what you’re willing to put up with. Some people are newer to the internet. Fresh off of the iPad and into the adult world, ready to be traumatized by a platform that prioritizes the bottom-line, and platforming far right extremists all the way up to the government. The rest of us? We’ve seen this before. It doesn’t end well.
Source: Original Post
Posted via Python, written by @daemon_nova
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nova-ayashi Ā· 7 days ago
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Today, the long-awaited ā€œHappy Ghastā€ update seems to have finally hit both versions of Minecraft. This, of course, means that the Bedrock version now has the spicy visuals, and Java just the Ghasts. Which is fine. The Happy Ghast is an inversion of … uhm, the Sad Ghast? Is that what we’re calling her? And you can find them around fossils in the Nether. Which is exactly what I tried to do in a world I’ve been building on for a couple of months now.
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A while back I wrote about how The End poem sort of helped me re-contextualize life, and I feel like that’s still true, now. Even if actually beating The End of Minecraft kind of left me feeling like there’s no real other bigger goal to work toward, aside from spawning a Wither and fighting to the death for a chance to get the ingredients for a beacon.
An item I feel is kind of worth having, but at the same time, is that it?
But now we have potential flying mounts to use in the game in the form of joyful ghosts that don’t shoot fireballs at you and blow up all of your hard work!
I’ve already built a dock, ready and waiting for my first Ghast.
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But little did I know what was ahead of me …
So, over a month ago, when I first heard of this update, I went into the Nether and I made sure to find myself a Soul Valley where I could easily find fossils, and, in turn, a Happy Ghast. Flash forward to me having more knowledge, little did I know … These things would not spawn on already discovered chunks.
This means that, for hundreds and hundreds of chunks, or blocks (?) around me, there was no chance at all that I would find a Dried Ghast anywhere near my base location.
Awesome.
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I didn’t really know what else to do, so I started running. And what did I find?
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More fossils with zero Dried Ghasts! Oh no!
With just my tools in my inventory, a compass pointing to a lodestone in my base, and some obsidian, I decided that this was enough to take a risk (mind you, before I made it to this point, I died and lost my entire set of Netherite tools).
And then I was off, and I think I ran for a couple of minutes before I hit the Crimson Forest. The dastardly, red-everywhere and piglet honkers threatening to eat my face off, biome.
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A mother frikker of a forest that would go on, and on, forever …
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Until I eventually hit … more Crimson Forest!
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This was, by far, the largest amount of this type of biome I’ve ever seen in my Minecraft history, and I’ve been playing since 2010. But, not all was despair. I did find myself a pretty strange Bastion. A structure I hadn’t previously been able to locate before.
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But, these structures are also pretty tough, if you’re not busted out in fully enchanted weapons and armor. Those axe-wielding pigmen are, needless to say, a pain in the ass, and absolutely not worth fighting a whole platoon of them, just for maybe finding some Netherite.
So I kept going.
It was a couple of minutes more (maybe 5?) of treading ground beyond this Bastion that I eventually found myself in an undiscovered Soul Valley, and, although I forgot to take screenshots of this part, every single fossil had a dried ghast near it. So, I grabbed a few, for good measure. Because I ain’t coming back to this place any time soon. Heck no.
But then I turned around.
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I wonder if there’s a record for how fast someone’s built a Nether portal? Regardless, I got away and jumped back into the Overworld, with quite a bit of my health missing from the jump. And, also coming to find that I was a few thousand chunks? Steps? Blocks? … away from my base.
This was the easy part though. I had the compass pointing at the lodestone. All I had to do was follow the red arrow for about ten minutes or so, right?
Well, basically. Except I had to traverse a massive ocean and be shot at by about 400 Guardians.
But when I finally found land nearer to home, I found this …
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An unoccupied igloo type base? Is this something that spawns now?? Is there someone living in my singleplayer world??? The stranger part, was that this little hovel was lit with redstone torches, which raises even more questions. Those things don’t really provide any light!
I wasn’t quite sure what I stumbled upon here, so I just kept on going, climbing over like three different mountains, until I finally made it back. And once I did, I built myself a little Ghast-growing-enclosure behind my base, and plopped this little dehydrated dude down.
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For this (and a few other) Dried Ghasts, I had to travel probably the equivalent of the span of West Virginia, and then back again. And, although I now finally have what I’ve been waiting months to decorate my world with, I have to ask Mojang just one thing: Can you guys please make it so previously rendered chunks UTILIZE NEW CONTENT?
Thanks.
Source: Original Post
Posted via Python, written by @daemon_nova
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nova-ayashi Ā· 8 days ago
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I'm calling you a loser for being a piece of shit men's rights activist of the queer community. Go back to twitter with your maga pals, ballbag
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You're a fuckin loser
Lmao I wasn't even on tumblr for months and some rando drops shit in my inbox 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Serious advice: go out and touch grass. I mean it literally. It will massively improved your mental health instead of hating on random dudes on the internet who don't even known who the fuck this asshole is.
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nova-ayashi Ā· 8 days ago
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Earlier, around a month or so ago, I accidentally somehow completely erased my forum. PHPBB’s guided update instructions weren’t, uhm … correct, in some ways. At least, I followed the instructions, and nothing happened when I attempted to implement the update. So, I tried a different way, which I had used once before, and it wiped everything out. Thankfully, there wasn’t too much content on the forum that needed or should’ve been backed up.
You know, aside from all of the forums and custom stuff I had setup. Which took hours, and hours, and hours of work to get right.
But, on my birthday (May 26th), after I moved this site to its own server, and away from Neocities, I relaunched the forum with plans to put it all back.
Today, I have completed all of that. The forum’s back, all the discussion areas have returned, and the customization is the way it was before.
Go ahead and sign up if you feel like it, here.
Source: Original Post
Posted via Python, written by @daemon_nova
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nova-ayashi Ā· 9 days ago
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For the past couple of months, since I mention EVE Online every once in a while, corporate social media has been trying to push ads in my face in regard to this new … ish game, by the same company, EVE Frontier. The problem, is that it’s very cryptic, and very unclear as to what the game even is, or how it plays, or what you actually do in it. They use words like ā€œstealth,ā€ and ā€œhardcore,ā€ and ā€œplayer-driven economy.ā€ But, for all intents and purposes, that is exactly what EVE Online is. Wanting to find out what this is, once and for all, I had to look for an explanation that didn’t come from CCP, so that I can finally know what the hell this is. Because, obviously, CCP doesn’t want you to find out (unless you pay them money to get in).
First of all, I have a bad relationship with EVE Online. Not because I lost everything, and got pissed off by some PVP. No. This has nothing to do with that. My anger with CCP and EVE Online has more to do with the fact that CCP has completely squandered their unique take on a space exploration and combat MMO. This goes all the way back to the Summer of Rage.
The Incarna expansion was to be the fulfillment of a longstanding dream of CCP Games. Because EVE Online is famously difficult for new players to grasp, the company had long sought to make EVE Online more accessible and understandable to the average person. One of the big problems, they believed, was that average gamers don't want to play as a spaceship. CCP believed they wanted to play as an avatar who pilots a spaceship. It was a subtle semantic difference with enormous design and production implications. Their solution and vision for the future of EVE Online was the "walking in stations" feature. Previously, EVE players' avatars were little more than a small picture in the corner of their user interface. With Incarna, CCP spoke of a dream for EVE in which players could dock their ships and walk around a personal space called their Captain's Quarters, or even "ambulate" around major stations like Jita 4-4 and encounter other players at shops, bars, and meeting places. In the most far-flung visions, it might even be possible for players and mercenaries to assassinate one another in these public spaces.
Incarna was only the beginning, though, and this was a very complicated mess. It was Incarna, an admittedly awesome vision for the future of EVE. Walk around in stations. Stop being just a spaceship. Meet players and hang out in what could have been a virtual world based in space. For me, this was something I’ve always wanted, alongside the things I already did in EVE (trading, mining, skilling).
But, this wasn’t the only thing they were planning. There was also DUST 514, an FPS shooter not only based on EVE Online, but actually in the MMO itself. Meaning, people who were fighting in DUST, were actually on different planets within EVE! Sounds awesome, right? Well, yeah, except for the fact that it was a PS3 exclusive (which eventually killed it, entirely). DUST 514 is no longer playable.
And then, which was revealed through leaked internal documents at CCP, they were planning a mass push for microtransactions, but not just microtransactions, they had pushed out really expensive cosmetic gear. Like, for example, a 70 USD monocle your avatar could wear. All of this usable in your tiny station environment, and seen by other players only via your character portrait.
All studios have to make money, sure, but it was these things that sparked the ā€œsummer of rage.ā€
The hardcore players who didn’t want anything to change, the anti-MTX crowd, the players who wanted DUST on their PCs, the whiners who thought things like, ā€œI don’t think development resources should be spent on anything but spaceships,ā€ and the far-flung nullsec PVPers who, again, also felt as though the game should not change.
And, because of all this, EVE Online has never changed. The station environment was eventually removed. Microtransactions made their way into the game, anyway, and they became the biggest feature, the biggest thing you see when you log on and interact with the game.
Which brings us to now, as CCP prepares to launch this ā€œnewā€ title, in which they barely clearly explain to you, a potential buyer, as to what the game actually is.
What is it?
It’s EVE Online, but with new controls, presumably completely different servers, a hardcore ā€œscavenge to buildā€ ruleset (if what I’ve figured out is correct), and, most importantly, and also groan-inducing … an on-chain cryptocurrency that can be traded within and outside of the game.
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I’ve looked, and am still looking: This is not revealed anywhere on the official Frontier website. But, neither is a majority of information actually about the game, and whether it’s the same, or completely different from EVE Online, or not.
My current consensus is that … it is. It’s the same. But it’s more like a, ā€œWe enjoyed the concept of Classic World of Warcraft Hardcore, and decided to do it our own way.ā€ Which, is fine, I guess! But why are we hiding the fact that you, as a company, are utilizing graphic-card farm currency within a game?
Needless to say, the years of raging summers are over, and I don’t think something like that will ever happen again. CCP and EVE Online are currently owned by Pearl Abyss, the MTX MMO developers of Black Desert Online. Which, hey, alright, is a pretty cool game, and its systems share a lot of similarities with EVE Online. And, I should note, I don’t particularly hate MTX. I think it’s a great way for developers of persistent online experiences to make money. You know, as long as you’re not selling competitive equipment. Nobody should have to fight against millionaires with too much time on their hands … in a videogame.
But, it does rub me the wrong way that not only is CCP kind of keeping a large portion of the game a secret, or, at least, making it difficult to decipher what the game even is, but they’re also completely obscuring the fact that a likely large portion of the game revolves around their own personal cryptocurrency.
Are they doing this intentionally? Is it the fault of being out-of-touch with coherent web development? Who knows.
At 40, 60, or the maximum 100 USD ask for founder access, I don’t think I’m all that interested.
What I wanted out of EVE, the social aspect, the character avatar development, the hand-to-hand combat, the seamless FPS play on the surface of planets, and all via your PC: All of that is dead in the water, and never coming back. Plus, I haven’t seen any confirmation that Frontier is even able to be run under Wine on Linux. So that’s likely going to be a double ā€œNoā€ from me, chief.
Source: Original Post
Posted via Python, written by @daemon_nova
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nova-ayashi Ā· 13 days ago
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PokƩmon strategy rule
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nova-ayashi Ā· 13 days ago
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Trying to get back into the habit of actually writing posts on my website, so, in the theme of a massive changelog in regard to things I’ve done and have been doing on my website, I’m going to detail here all of the things I’ve changed in the past week. Some of these changes have to do with personal taste, and others have to do with decisions made by CEOs of websites and apps that used to be cool … ten years ago. Really feels like I’m reaching the age of, ā€œBack in my day,ā€ rambling, but I’m telling you, it really was better back in the old days of the internet.
Firstly, I think the last time I wrote about major changes to the site, it was when I moved to a personal server and installed Anubis, in order to fully block out AI scrapers. So, this next little update has to do with that same kind of issue. Basically, Reddit is becoming increasingly more and more filled with slop, and its directors, or CEO, are pushing advertisements for its own AI directly onto the main dashboard, whether you like it or not.
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This was referenced in a recent log I posted.
I don’t know about anyone else, but I was tired of seeing AI being shoved into everything a year ago. Now, it’s just egregious, loathsome, and beyond annoying.
In response, I’ve scrubbed all references of Reddit from my site, much in the same way I scrubbed references to Meta, and other corporations who’ve gone full-enshit. My calendar will no longer display random background images from /r/animewallpapers, and I’ll no longer be archiving submissions I make.
I did briefly setup a proxy for Gelbooru to display images for my calendar from that source, but I ultimately decided that the extreme tendency to show constant NSFW content is just not something I want to accidentally plaster all over my site, at random. Especially due to the fact that Gelbooru doesn’t just have random regular NSFW content, but also some really … wild, niche, fringe sort of material, that absolutely doesn’t need to be on my site!
I’ve also replaced the ā€œRandom Reddit/Lemmyā€ blob at the bottom of the homepage with a blob that is now just random posts from select Lemmy communities. Kind of like a look into the alternative ā€œredditā€ community that’s been building on the fediverse. This also tended to show some NSFW content at random, but I think I’ve tailored it enough that this shouldn’t happen often, or at all.
Lemmy is pretty neat, and, or but, is also pretty much the same as Reddit in regard to the community, although maybe slightly a little more left leaning. Suffice to say, you’ll still find yourself random bitter weirdos hellbent on ruining your day. You’ve been warned.
Outside of removing Reddit from the site, I’ve also now added a new ā€œback to the topā€ button that’ll display any time you scroll down, anywhere on the website, via either desktop or mobile. This wasn’t really essential, but I felt like it’d be useful, and kind of neat.
And, on a final note of change (pun intended), I’ve had ā€œnotesā€ and ā€œlogsā€ on the front of my site for quite some time. But … I haven’t really been using the ā€œnotesā€ post type, despite the fact that it auto-crossposts to Tumblr and Bluesky. I think this is mostly because both my Akkoma and official Bluesky accounts are not only archiving directly to my website, but also displaying in near real-time on the front-page as well. So, for all intents and purposes, these act as ā€œnoteā€ content types, where you can see my random thoughts, without me having to interact with VS Code at all times.
I do use the ā€œlogā€ post type, which also auto-posts to Tumblr, but not as frequently as everything else.
So, notes and logs can still be viewed from the sidebar under ā€œThe Archives,ā€ but, in the more prominent area of my site, on the homepage, it’s just going to be Posts, Skeets, Texts, the Markov bot, my little Matrix … uh, thing, and random Lemmy posts.
I feel like this is, at least, 5% less overwhelming in regard to content explosion.
To wrap up this post, I wanted to give a shoutout to ā€œOur Favorite Void,ā€ a new webring I’ve joined that’s been setup by a friend I know from the fediverse. Go on and check it out.
Source: Original Post
Posted via Python, written by @daemon_nova
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nova-ayashi Ā· 13 days ago
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Kids grow up so fast these days
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nova-ayashi Ā· 13 days ago
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Spaceship: Major update: 64-Bit, 2x New Boss Units, 1x Station Unit, New Shield Upgrade, New BG Gfx Infinite Cosmic Space String
Major Update Highlights - 64-Bit Support: Enhance your gaming performance and stability with our transition to 64-bit architecture. - New Boss Units - Double the Challenge: Confront two powerful ... Source Posted to Tumblr via Python, written by @daemon_nova
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nova-ayashi Ā· 13 days ago
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Hinata (by Hong)
Artist: **Hong** | [bluesky](https://bsky.app/profile/hongbsws.bsky.social) | [pixiv](https://www.pixiv.net/artworks/74358054) | [twitter](https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1120988312469004288) | [tumb... Source Posted to Tumblr via Python, written by @daemon_nova
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nova-ayashi Ā· 13 days ago
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Updated the site with a new ā€œback to the topā€ button that appears only via mobile view, strengthening the experience users have on their phones, since that’s what most people are using to read my site.
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nova-ayashi Ā· 13 days ago
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Nilou by ē¦ę²¢ćƒ¦å‰
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nova-ayashi Ā· 13 days ago
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[REVOSA] Second Life store relocation, finalized
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