Just to adress your first sentence: My first thought was that these groups most likely don’t go for checkups with the same frequency. On the socio economic dimensions of traits, Hispanics might define a homogeneous group.
Just to adress your first sentence: My first thought was that these groups most likely don’t go for checkups with the same frequency. On the socio economic dimensions of traits, Hispanics might define a homogeneous group.
Year, the 40+ part is the problem here,or the need to work such hours as a new parent. The Feature freaks people out, rightfully because the underlying issue is so absurd.
Now I am reading everything alout with my inner voice instead of just skipping over it. I’ve entered manual reading mode. Great. Thanks.
On a 10 from 5 to scale, how many of you that read wrong?
Worst bleaching yet
Almost all screens facing the wrong direction indicates that the computer doesn’t know how a computer is operated.
Mine runs very smooth. I guess it’s a matter of hardware or Ressource allocation?
I have a fujitsu thin client with a 4 core Celeron CPU and 8gb RAM. Nextcloud and Maria DB run in separate containers in proxmox.
I am the only user. I have only office, face recognition and maps installed. Other than that I use calender, contact and Foto sync.
I agree that the basic functions are similar, comping one particular instance of lemmy with reddit, but the fediverse, at least in my opinion, adds to the complexity. And when it comes to complexity, you have to keep in mind that there are business models out there focused on reducing the complexity of much more basic needs such as preparing a meal.
What if the instance I have registered with doesn’t provide a particular content I crave? If a new account was required to get the content I’m liking for, it may be a deal breaker. This problem is solved elegantly by federation. But if I browse all to search for that particular sub(?) which one ist the right one?
There is (at least for a newcommer) so much choice (compared to reddit) which looks very similar at first glance. Choosing a sub or an instance is not complicated, but in it’s nature complex, and the ability and willingness to handle that complexity may be major turn off for many newcomers.
I saw someone post that the competition between subs on different instances would drive quality, but that is not necessarily the case, when the metric I use is the number of followers in a sub. In the end, this thought of a free market will either result in a monopoly, one sub on one instance being preferred due to the amount of content and hence the visibility, or stagnation because none of the subs will provide the necessary quality to attract the masses.
Being new to Mastodon and Lemmy I personally struggle to figure things out. Just finding a brief summary on how Lemmy works in contrast to reddit has, so far, yielded no helpful results. While I think for me this is just a matter of sticking with the services I can imagine that a lot of people would check in, struggle and check out again.
The, let’s call it infrastructure, of Lemmy and the way registration works due to the fediverse is quite different to what most people are used to.
https://www.bmi.bund.de/EN/topics/migration/migration-node.html
This is the official site of the ministry of migration and integration. To serve in the German military, you need citizenship if I recall correctly. You’d have to get here yourself, though.