I almost deleted it but decided an edit would be more fun. I’m glad I didn’t delete it now 😊
I almost deleted it but decided an edit would be more fun. I’m glad I didn’t delete it now 😊
That seems like an interesting idea. But even if it dosen’t look like Wikipedia I don’t really like the “look and feel” of MediaWiki for what I want it to be.
But posting it on a private lemmy instance seems like a really nice thing. As noted in another comment that is probably the route I will go for now.
That is actually interesting to know. Could you maybe link a blog that is using the plugin so I can see how it looks both on the Wordpress page and on Mastodon?
What I realized is what I really would like is for the blog to present itself to lemmy as a community and each blog post as a post in lemmy. So everyone that has a lemmy account somewhere could comment it and follow the blog just like a community on an instance. But I don’t think there is a plugin currently available like that. So maybe the best I can do right now is what @Kangie@lemmy.srcfiles.zip is doing and posting the blog entry as a lemmy post aswell.
No, but I will check it out now!
Edit: Sorry for the double response… I got an error the first time I hit Submit.
No, but I will check it out now!
I’m actually already using mediawiki for my own notes, but the quality I write down for myself is not as good as I want to publish. 🙈
I also don’t find the style of mediawiki that nice and was specifically looking for something different that makes things look a bit more polished just from the styling itself.
But I suppose it would also have it’s benefits using a software I’m already familiar with. 🤔
My impression of lemmy changed a lot once I’ve read this updated from the lemmy devs from less than a month ago. TL;DR: Lemmy was developed by just two people and with reddit self-destructing everyone jumped to it, and lemmy wasn’t really ready for that.
With that info I’m now all the more impressed that lemmy is working as well as it currently is and not crashing every few minutes!
Thanks for explaining this, I feel like I already learned more on lemmy than I ever did on reddit now!
I’ll keep this in mind the next time I want to optimize images on a website.
+1 for programming.dev
Interesting. I’ve in the past specifically encoded images for a webpage I created to .webp
using https://squoosh.app as I determined it visually looked best for the file size while also being supported by pretty much all modern browsers.
And since none of the other modern image formats you’ve listed are widely supported by many modern browsers I will probably do the same again when I have to create another website with some images. But I would hope that other formats gain more traction in browsers so that I can use them in the future.
What benefit does rejecting image/webp
give?
Awesome.
In my mind Linux is something I use on servers, but on my desktop I’m far too used to Windows. And since everything I want “just works” on Windows I haven’t really found the motivation to try / switch over to Linux for my desktop.
Elbullazul@lem.elbullazul.com> Audiobookshelf
I didn’t know that existed and now I love it and started up a docker container for it!
Thanks! :D
Can you link an example on how that can be done?