It's hard to see what's going on here, but you might try using an irrigation tool called a riser or nipple extractor -- it's designed for removing broken plastic risers outdoors, but might work if you can insert it far enough (it's difficult to tell from your photo if the material in the center is a liquid or a solid). Have a look at https://www.homedepot.com/p/Orbit-1-2-in-and-3-4-in-Plastic-Nipple-Extractor-26076/100203404
A good Lemmy client goes a long way toward facilitating content discovery; I'm a Voyager user, and it supports sorting Home (subscribed) and All (unsubscribed) post feeds in various ways including New, Active, Scaled, Controversial, etc.
When I was new to Lemmy, I used Voyager's subreddit migration tool to match communities with my interests (see https://vger.app/settings/reddit-migrate ) -- I believe Artic and a number of other clients have similar functionality.
Just browsing the All feed has helped me find communities (and compile a list of things to block!)
Tailscale is also ridiculously easy to use for this purpose. The serve and Funnel features make secure self hosting really easy from your tailnet (one can easily provision certificates for nodes using Let's Encrypt from the CLI: https://tailscale.com/blog/reintroducing-serve-funnel
Your point is well taken. However, there are communities where some of the bot posted content is just interesting enough to read, and I'm not sure that the owners of the rss@ or b0t@ accounts care much about their upvote / downvote ratios, but I suppose it could help some of Voyager's sorting filters.
As others have said, one's view of Lemmy is highly dependent upon the instances and communities that one frequents. As someone who isn't a habitué of politics, news, sport or meme communities, I've found my fellow lemmings to be pleasant, but I also believe that that is due to trying to be helpful and polite myself and being willing to apologize when warranted.
Well put. Since we've co-opted this comment section with meta-commentary, I'll also say that since LLMs came on the scene, I feel as if my sixth sense for AI text slop has become very refined; I can usually identify generative text within a few sentences, and stop reading.
Wow, how does that work? Does the font selector program generate a custom font file which gets deployed on each system? How does this work with printers?
I am at risk of becoming Lemmy's resident curmudgeon with my protestations against clickbait headlines, and now a distaste for lazy and unappealing generative AI images in articles, which disincentivize reading the material. Not the poster's fault, of course.
Oh, lovely. I had no idea this existed, but I'll try it out. Many thanks!