Wanting to add high value content to this community consistently to keep it alive and interesting for new subscribers. Am excited for the future of this Lemmy community
Something that I like to focus on with the idea of a solarpunk kitchen is the practice of cooking outside during the summer times. To keep from needing to put more effort into cooling the house afterward, using a solar cooker outside, or an electric stove outside.
This could be my kitchen if I didn’t overwater my plants all the time 😞
This would be so lovely for some far northern/southern latitudes that need all the sun they can get to stay warm. With double or triple paned glass to insulate.
This reminds me of a real kitchen in Boston https://images.app.goo.gl/rSALBuu5cLbsKEmE9
This is awesome. What program and prompt?
Since I’m still learning, can you tell me why this says “lemmy.world” under it? I notice that your username indicates that lemmy.world is your home server. Do I understand correctly that this image is hosted on lemmy.world even though its posed to the [email protected] community?
Thanks for sharing @[email protected]
@[email protected] I’m pretty sure it’s hosted on slrpnk.net even though it was posted by a user on lemmy.world . Just decentralization and interoperability working as they should.
Are you sure? When I hover over the words “lemmy.world” it shows the full URL destination for the link, and I can see that when I click on the image it’s hosted at “https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/3a12d532-f0f4-4f90-9a66-406e746f5183.jpeg”.
It really looks like it’s hosted on lemmy.world.
Does anyone have any information (ideally at a very accessible level, possibly with a diagram) that explains where files are hosted and how they’re posted across non-local servers?
Yes, images from other Lemmy instances are currently not cached. Image caching in Lemmy a bit of a complex mess that makes it hard to understand when a image is cached on the local instance or not.
Edit: basically what happens is: If you upload an image directly this local link will be shared to other instances and they will show it like in this post. The image upload host is always your home instance, so even when posting to a remote community your home instance will host the image.
But it you link to an external image host like imgur, then the home instance will pull a local copy in its cache and show that. However it federates the original link to imgur and not the local cached link, thus on other instances the picture will be loaded from imgur.
I think the latter part is an unintended side-effect of an incomplete caching implementation in Pict-rs / Lemmy.
Thanks for the explanation.
Do you have any advice on how to post images? I’d like to be mindful of hosting costs. Is sharing a link to Google photos better than downloading and uploading, for instance?
For now uploading them here is no problem. If you want you can scale down the image a bit, but I’ll probably do that automatically on the server soon.
The entire image hosting situation is not very satisfactory on Lemmy in general right now, so I expect there to be some bigger changes in the backend anyway. Thus not much point optimizing it right now.
Thanks, that’s good to know.
Separately, though, it’s certainly easier to copy and paste URLs than download and upload. Does linking to images on the web work, if I find it more convenient?
Sure, you do you. Just depending on the link people from other instances might not be able to access it.
Thanks for your information. As I said I was “pretty sure” which isn’t to say “sure” or positive and possibly incorrect. I do see see what you’re referring to. My understanding on how activitypub works to federate is that it’s sent FROM lemmy.world and the originating user TO slpnk.net as it lists in the heading just like sending email from one server to another. The Lemmy Devs mention this at https://join-lemmy.org/docs/introduction.html “Just like a traditional website, people sign up on it, post messages, upload pictures and talk to each other. Unlike a traditional website, Lemmy instances can interoperate, letting their users communicate with each other; just like you can send an email from your Gmail account to someone from Outlook, Fastmail, Proton Mail, or any other email provider, as long as you know their email address, you can mention or message anyone on any website using their address.”
From my understanding, Activitypub uses lots of copies just like there is a copy of this post on any Mastodon or other Fediverse servers that are federated with us so there may be more than one server hosting the image. If you click through on the link above you may find some useful explainers and you might get a more technical response from another Fediverse focused community like [email protected] or [email protected]
Midjourney.solarpunk kitchen, natural light, skylight, wooden bowls, pothos vines - Image #1 <@450131071544197132>
It looks so clean. Is this 5? How does the pricing work? And are you interested in any idea recommendations?
This is 5.2. I believe it’s like $10 a month essentially, but sometimes I go over the alotted number of requests, and it’s an additional $4 to top up.
Happy to take requests, especially solar punk related.
Okay cool!
I’m working on a tabletop RPG, and generating visual assets for it is pretty challenging. I don’t know what kind of stuff you prefer to make, but I can tell you some examples of things I’d be ecstatic over if you wanted to make them, and if any of them appeal to you or you’d like other suggestions, let me know.
First and foremost are action shots. Of all the stuff I come across, a tableau of a hero or group of characters in a moment of action is probably the rarest kind of solarpunk image I come across. An example I could image, for instance is of a spy or thief escaping down a path on jumpstilts, while a pursuer on a bike is attempting to tag them with a tracer from a wrist-mounted slingshot. Or a park ranger flying with mechanical wings is alighting on a high cliff to render medical aid to a climber. Or a firefighter on a cargo motorcycle is racing through a burning forest. I’ve got more of these if this appeals to you.
Second would be backgrounds. These are similar to what you posted above. Backdrops to dollhouse style roleplay. I could always use more of these. Some that I currently need would be a boxing gym with a view overlooking a dense, forested urban area from a high floor. An innercity forest (with some elements of the city visible a few dozen or hundred meters off) with an elevated treehouse and walkways for observing and moving through the forest without disturbing the floor.
Lastly would be general art of things and people and places to populate the manual. Examples would be someone picking out fruit at a corner grocer in a bustling city market, or a construction worker explaining what they’re doing to a group of kids in the midst of a very safe looking construction site, etc.
Here’s the manual if you’d like to see the kind of world I’m trying to show images of: Fully Automated RPG
Here are the story modules and the story module assets. The current assets are kind of a mix of types. Eventually I’ll need to remove anything I haven’t gotten permission to use, but for now I’m including whatever I can.
Reminds me of the PEI Ark!
This reminds me of every house I built in Minecraft
I would I’ve here in a heartbeat.