for me the ripple design wasn't even a problem, but i dread the days i have to wash something that had cooked meat in them with that plastic.
Wilker
yes there is a warning but still no guide, not in the popup, nor in the association setup to tell what things mean
worry about users not being able to open files after renaming them since you can also edit those extensions via text, and people aren't taught about file association.
thank you, that also helped ^^
thank you. changing from default defined by the browser to another theme fixed it. <3
the main idea behind the blockade is that Facebook implementing ActivityPub can easily overwhelm any instance small enough in infrastructure through the sheer amount of traffic that such connection would have on the rest of the Fediverse (case and point, the occasional waves of Twitter users moving to Mastodon), and with fewer instances it can get easier for the company to take advantage of that to take over the network and make it monopolized again.
edit: i didn't read your comment properly, i thought that was lacking context. sorry x.x
edit 2: https://lemmy.ca/post/11771031 someone else shared this thread, it's an interesting and important read
thank you ^^
i see now. thank you
the image doesn't match at all with the actual website even though the individual entries in the picture are accurate.
the entire list is mixed half-and-half across the board, with slight bias to Federated status. still a long way to go.
but what if my unrealistic transition goal is literally a non-human form?
jk
kinda ^^'
i'd probably pick MiniMetro and simple rythm games like ADOFAI or Rythm Doctor to begin with, simple shapes and an obvious thing to learn to do.
MineTest (has android ver.) and StuntRally are pretty close to reach if you're willing to be patient and teach them to explore an open space on their own or of their own (one is basically a sandbox engine like Garry's Mod, the other has a map editor alongside the several open maps). takes a while to understand the UI of each but it's possible to use.
Celeste is notoriously difficult regardless of age, as a platformer about climbing a mountain, but i'm sure they can grasp it (no pun intended).
non-game programs are also an option. i remember having my mom teach me to use MSPowerPoint which made me break and build a ton of things later on by the time i was 7, it was a mess, but i made that mess :3
try an art program like Pencil2D, Krita or InkScape, maybe something unrelated like LibreOffice Impress or KDE Marble, or a music program like MilkyTracker (has android ver.) and take your time to teach them to make a tune or a flipbook or navigate a map, i'm sure they'll have fun with something like it too.
adorb