
Just a tip, don’t dump it all in at once. Spread it out over 12 months or so. This will prevent losing too much money when the market crashes. It is called dollar-cost averaging.
Just a tip, don’t dump it all in at once. Spread it out over 12 months or so. This will prevent losing too much money when the market crashes. It is called dollar-cost averaging.
That sounds like a fun book for school children!
Remove the .4 from “go 1.23.4” or replace it by .2. It probably does not need the latest go patches to compile
I have had this before in Go when I had an older version of Go installed but the dependency needed a newer version. It then tries to download a temporary tool chain of a new Go version to compile the dependency (or whatever it is doing). For me, that failed. What did work was upgrading Go to the latest version.
You can check what your installed Go version is by
go version
If it is lower than 1.23.4, upgrade it.
Oh, my bad. I thought I read it somewhere that it was having some problems because of CloudFlare protection so the site would not go down by the flood of new users.
I think that is true. Could be because instances like Lemmy.ml don’t let new users create an account, beehaw unfederated other instances and kbin also has some problems with federation… So, only Lemmy.world can really thrive I guess. Other instances I have not seen that much. Maybe sh.itjust.works (or something like that) are thriving but I don’t know.
Not at the moment that I am aware… There are apps but they are not as good as RIF. Hopefully the 3rd party reddit apps will be ported.
Not blocking but LinkedIn pushes mobile browsers towards their app.
Totally agree. It’s called social loafing. From Wikipedia: “In social psychology, social loafing is the phenomenon of a person exerting less effort to achieve a goal when they work in a group than when working alone. It is seen as one of the main reasons groups are sometimes less productive than the combined performance of their members working as individuals.”
In large communities like Reddit, users are less likely to participate than in a small community
Same in the Netherlands.