If you don’t know know what is this, please see this post: https://lemmy.eco.br/post/11096964

I remember when I used to be active on Scratch… all those kids trying to get popular on top of others’ projects, those meaningless “follow for follow” requests… That was never what the site was intended for. I’m now in another phase. I may still use Scratch (rarely), but those days of scrolling through comments and profiles are gone.

I wish Godot was just as simple to understand as Scratch…

  • tuna@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 days ago

    #F5A9B8 at (15,13)

    Palette and y-coordinate helper
    • Cyan - #5BCEFA at 7-10, 23-26
    • Pink - #F5A9B8 at 11-14, 19-22
    • White - #FFFFFF at 15-18
  • LordAmplifier@pawb.social
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    2 days ago

    #F5A9B8 at 17,19

    It’s interesting how our interactions with certain websites change over time. I used to frequent Pokemon forums and never thought I’d stop, but then I stopped. The same thing happened with websites like Deviantart, Facebook, Twitter, Reddit – and now, I don’t use any of them any more. I barely use Youtube, and I’m sure there’ll come a day when Twitch is going to fall apart, too.

      • LordAmplifier@pawb.social
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        1 day ago

        I usually start using websites because they’re fun. Deviantart was a cool place to post art and interact with others. I used to post drawings and photos back in 2011. It’s full of AI slop these days, but I left long before that because my interest in the website just fizzled out. Twitch is still relatively nice, I think, because there are lots of cool people there who are fun to watch and really good at the games they play. Amazon will probably drive it against a wall eventually, but for the time being, it’s better than all alternatives. The same is true for all the other websites I used to use. They were fun, I got to interact with people, but eventually, they weren’t fun to use any more, and then I left.