Both human and dog feces have significant variation in how they smell, so this question is somewhat meaningless. Dogs are carnivores, so if you ate meat, your feces is probably going to smell more like dog feces than if you ate only plant-based food.
schnurrito
Suppose I (on discuss.tchncs.de) report something written by a user on lemmy.zip to this community (on lemmy.world).
Three instances will store this report in their database:
- discuss.tchncs.de
- lemmy.zip
- lemmy.world
Your account I am replying to is on none of these instances, so it has no way of seeing those reports.
From what I read (ie take with a grain of salt): reports are sent from the instance of the reporting user to the instance of the community and that of the user who wrote the reported comment. So those three instances know about them. They are not federated to other instances that have community moderators, so if you're on a different instance than the community, you won't see reports sent by remote users about other remote users.
I mean why would that not be so? I no longer own a car but when I did, it was usually oversized for what I needed to transport (me and my backpack).
AFAIK a Steam Deck is a full Linux PC, so you can do anything on it that you can do on a Linux PC, including that. Whether this will be especially convenient is a different question.
The article missed that SuperTuxKart has a mode that is somewhat similar to Rocket League.
I don't see a lot of the things you're trying to avoid on my instance. But I almost always browse "subscribed" and mostly have no idea what's going on in communities I'm not subscribed to.
It is in the Sims. Including "The Sims Bustin' Out" which is an RPG.
Ja das auch. Aber ich glaube den Proponenten solcher Ideen schon ihre eigene Behauptung, es gehe ihnen primär darum, Jugendliche zu unterdrücken.
Federation means that when anything happens on one instance (post, comment, whatever), that instance will also inform other instances of this. Which other instances? The ones that have at least one user who has indicated they are interested in that kind of activity (on Lemmy mostly: by subscribing to the community).
So already now you can see eg my instance's copy of a lemm.ee community at https://discuss.tchncs.de/c/cartographyanarchy@lemm.ee and this will not disappear just because lemm.ee goes down. It's stored in my instance's database. But it will no longer be possible to post or comment there because that will no longer federate to other instances.
It's not guaranteed that all of lemm.ee will be accessible elsewhere. Some communities might not have (always had) subscribers from other instances, which would mean no other database has stored those parts.
USB C ... C ... sea ....... you might be onto something there 😂