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deleted by creator
Hey man, I personally don’t mind it! I like to see people’s updates in their journey to learn something new.
When you use the @rust tag, it creates a post on Lemmy - see here for your post: https://programming.dev/post/2222112
https://docs.netlify.com/configure-builds/overview/?#basic-build-settings
You just need to configure your build command and most likely your publish directory. Netlify honestly makes it really easy.
The build command is whatever you’d type in your terminal to compile your react app, and the publish directory is wherever your build command creates your static assets.
Out of all the modern browsers, it’s always Safari that I end up needing to write compatibility code for. I’m sure the app works fine on Firefox, they just haven’t tested it.
What bike do you use and would you recommend it? I’ve been looking for an e-bike recently since I work so close to home, but I haven’t found any that seem reputable and a good value. I’m definitely looking for one that’s easily repairable and not paired to a specific brand’s software or proprietary parts.
Granted, I’ve only been passively looking (I.e. when I see an ad or doing a quick google search sometimes), but from what I can tell most of the advertised bikes are just the same handful of models with a different logo slapped on it and dubious claims about its performance.
I don’t agree - while you could copy it, if an instance gathered a large user base and had some well-implemented quality of life features, there’s nothing stopping them from putting ads on it and I’d guess that most users would continue to use that instance. If it has quality content, they already have an account, and it has compelling improvements over other instances, I can’t imagine that some unobtrusive ads would bother people enough to go to a clone of that instance and create another account.
Sure, it could be done, and ad blockers are common enough, but I don’t think well-placed ads would cause some mass exodus. I’d even be okay with it if it’s in the name of paying the server bills for such an instance.
Just wanted to give props to this super informative comment. Thanks for the write up and relevant links!