Ours switched to attesting in the hr system. You don’t do your 3 days? That’s a paddlin’
Ours switched to attesting in the hr system. You don’t do your 3 days? That’s a paddlin’
Isn’t arc a chromium fork thus subject to Google’s shenanigans?
Some podcasts have chapters, chapter art, show notes, etc. “Accidental Tech Podcast” is a good example. Spotify sucks for podcasts and they’re trying to kill podcasting so they can take it over.
Same reason I’m on Suse now as well. I got tired of tinkering all the time.
I’d throw an option out for Suse but if you really want as little OS as possible Arch Linux.
I didn’t hear that, but I’m not surprised it’s also about control. When you offer a paid API you’re capping potential revenues for those users at essentially a flat rate.
I suspect that their revenue generation plans likely would see more than 10M/yr return so they threw out some big number to kill everything, force a portion of those users to their own services where they’re planning on ramping up monetization
I’d like to think most of the app users are power users who actually drive a lot of value and forcing them to leave will tank your business, but who knows, time will tell.
Exactly. Even a server to just go down one day. Theoretically it has a snapshot in time
I feel like we’re seeing a lot of money leave tech. These companies are no longer getting cash injections and running into the red. The number one game for them now is revenue generation and that is through user fees and advertising. That’s why we’re seeing this shit now.
A lot of these platforms (Twitter/Reddit) started off simple and never took into account advertising. That means third party apps never got the ad feed in the general timeline.
Seeing their infinite funds dry up, these companies are now looking for where they can generate extra revenue, or where they are not generating revenue and making cuts.
These APIs cost them money. So now they’re making the gamble. Will their users tolerate losing their favourite apps to a privacy invading and ad serving machine just to access their feeds?
Server backend stuff was to contradict the Reddit CEOs claims about Apollo being inefficient on the API.
I’ve been having trouble getting going with Mastodon. But I’ve also had issues with Twitter as well. Lemmys been great so far.
So does Musi on iOS