Ihr betreibt doch auch einen #BookWyrm Server, oder? Kann man da auch sein Profil von einer anderen Instanz hin umziehen? Oder wenigstens die Bücher irgendwie als Liste importieren?
Er ist noch auf der prerelease Version von v0.7.1 und genau mit dieser V wurde die Account-Migration eingeführt. Weil unserer noch prerelease ist, bin ich nicht sicher, ob die Funktion vollständig ist. In gut einer Woche bin ich aus dem Urlaub und habe dann das Update vor.
Du kannst aber schonmal schauen, welche Version deine aktuelle Heimat hat. Findest du unter .../about. Alternativ gucken, ob's .../preferences/move gibt :)
¡He escrito un libro! 💫
Va de #internet, y de qué vamos a hacer para recuperarla (por supuesto, tiene un capítulo dedicado al #fediverso). Ojalá os resulte interesante y sea útil para pensar cómo impulsar tecnologías libres y más justas.
This may be a silly question, but how does one actually read short story collections? Is it the same as if reading a novel? Do you put the book down between every story? Do you look for connections between the stories? Am I supposed to read them linearly?
Settling down for my nightly explorations of other worlds, aka reading, and thinking about how you know a book is a good book when you don’t want to reach the ending.
The Sword of Kaigen by M. L. Wang has been one of those books. Where the 500+ previous pages went I have no idea because they flew by.
i first filed this on #bookwyrm, where it was accepted and thrown away without explanation. which is why i continue to become disenamoured of the platform. but i told @grimalkina i'd share science tidbits from this cat book.
The fear of artificial life is intimately tied up with the word robot itself, which first appeared in the 1921 science fiction play R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots), written by the Czech author Karel Čapek. In the play, artificial people—robots—are produced in a factory by the Rossum company. Eventually the robots, who can think for themselves, rise up in rebellion and exterminate almost all of humanity.… The word robot was derived from the Czech roboti, which refers to a serf-like forced laborer.
— Gregory Gbur in Falling Felines and Fundamental Physics https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300231298/falling-felines-and-fundamental-physics/
People told me that Neil Gaiman is a good writer. In fact, they said he’s one of the best. But this sentence is a little questionable. also, he’s used the word wall nine times in this exact same paragraph.
I think we should slightly rethink how login works on most Fediverse apps (Mastodon, Lemmy, but not only)
A while ago I posted a thread back on the...