

I miss the ol’ switcharoo and beetlejuicing
The [email protected] chain has been slowly growing over the past couple of years, and I just created [email protected].
Alt accounts that are also me:
I miss the ol’ switcharoo and beetlejuicing
The [email protected] chain has been slowly growing over the past couple of years, and I just created [email protected].
But strangely enough, no community for it until now: [email protected]
Please feel free to post this there.
It’s the old [email protected] at this point.
You can edit your giraffaroo to point to this link: https://feddit.org/comment/1716202
Already started: [email protected]
The head of the chain is currently here: https://feddit.org/comment/1716202
Your clubs have a uniform?
I put a six-drawer dresser in my closet:
Plastic drawers and bins of twisty puzzles go on top of the dresser.
Empty cardboard boxes, emergency rations, and less frequently used textiles go on the shelf near the ceiling.
Reject Autocad, embrace FreeCAD.
OK, doomer.
Old MacDonald had a farm…
Yeah, that caught my eye as well.
Correct. If no one from your instance has subscribed to a given community yet, it might not show up in your search results. Lemmyverse.net is a good way to find small communities on other instances.
A RES-like userscript to easily navigate Lemmy with your keyboard.
Violentmonkey + Lemmy Universal Link Switcher
Best way to avoid accidentally leaving your home instance.
Lemmy Universal Link Switcher, or LULs for short, scans all links on all websites, and if any link points to a Lemmy instance that is not your main/home instance, it rewrites the link so that it instead points to your main instance.
I guess I’ll go first:
https://lemmyverse.net/communities
Best way to search for communities across the entire platform.
Excellent video, Technology Connections is one of my favourite channels.
https://www.radiomuseum.org/r/sears_roeb_silvertone_18_ch132877.html
Four already did:
Launched 10 September 2024 as the 14th crewed orbital flight of a Crew Dragon spacecraft, Isaacman and his crew of three — Scott Poteet, Sarah Gillis and Anna Menon — flew in an elliptic orbit that took them 1,400 kilometers (870 mi) away from Earth, the farthest anyone has been since NASA’s Apollo program.
Svalbard Rocket Range at Ny-Ålesund in Svalbard, Norway.
Source