Vst Crack Discord Server

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Caterina Haggins

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Aug 5, 2024, 5:38:21 AM8/5/24
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Discordis becoming an extremely popular venue for online discussions, and our sister community ReasonML uses it quite regularly. We therefore thought it would be a good idea to at least try it out, and see what it allows for in terms of community development.

Assuming that this server is a success, we can also consider running a bridge between the IRC channel and the Discord server. This would require creating a bot running on one of our OCaml machines, but is fairly trivial to do.


Besides, there is a price to pay that I find hard to accept from an ethical point of view, all the more for a language that stems from the scientific community. If you read the terms and conditions of Discord, you can see that there are very serious problems (I will gloss over granting Discord a license on all I write, Discord having to apply the DMCA, etc.): in particular, people from some countries may be forbidden to connect to Discord, due to US export laws. Seriously? Do we agree for fellow researchers, engineers, etc. fans of OCaml, to be excluded from discussion about our favorite language just because they were born in this or that country, and all this for us to enjoy a slick chat interface?


I suppose riot.im is a matrix-based solution ? Why not pich that instead of discord then ? Matrix has many bridges, is FOSS and does not suffer most of the shortcomming of discord, at least in the eyes of grumpy people like me (and @grayswandyr), while still offering a fresh interface for newcommers.


Just a quick note that I will occasionally remove people from the server who have not been online for 30 days. You are always free to rejoin the server with the above link. This is just to keep the user list clean.


Today we are rolling out some changes to our UI. For those that haven't already played with it, you'll notice it's very white. We appreciate that a lot of developers like working in darker environments and so we've introduced a dark theme. In order...


The server (with its multiple channels) is still actively used for support, development discussion and some community projects, such as the LSP package. The invite link in the first post is still valid and I do not intend to invalidate it.


Unfortunately, there is no official Zapier Discord server. However, I have passed this to our internal feedback database, which our product teams use when looking to make improvements and changes to Zapier.


Thanks for reaching out! Hillary here from the Support Team. I appreciate you sharing your feedback, as feedback is one of the things we consistently use to make our product and our offerings better. Below I have outlined some further information about the points that you have brought up.


We do not currently have a Support specific discord. There is, however, a fun announcement on the horizon regarding Jamstack discord spaces that will be coming out soon. I encourage you to stay tuned for the next week or two.


Our primary Support space for non-paying Netlify customers are these Forums. This is not a substitute for the public Github repos we have, linked here, where you can filed targeted issues. We have intentionally selected a public Forums format so that we can build out categories such as our Support Guides, which houses over 90 guides that answer frequently asked questions about topics such as DNS, debugging builds, and best practices for optimizing build time. We hear you that it can be a bit crowded, and we are currently working on archiving duplicate threads (see new post here) that make searching a bit tricky, and also working to highlight the most relevant threads. If you have further suggestions regarding optimizing search, please do share them here!


When it comes to making a new account, I hear you! Folks have lots of log-ins for various sites these days. The benefit of having a Netlify specific Forum with your Netlify login is that it streamlines Support effort for us and generates a faster response time. Like I mentioned above, we have a high number of folks using Netlify every day. When folks use their Netlify account email to sign up for the Netlify Forums, the Support Engineers can quickly access your account when trying to get you un-stuck, among other things!


To your point about limiting conversation, I would like to share that our Forums, much like StackOverflow, are hosted on discourse. Can you share a bit more about what particular components on our Forums act as a barrier to conversation? We are consistently looking for ways to make the Forums more accessible and inclusive, so I would love to hear more about what has felt discouraging or limiting so that I can surface it to my team.


Ok-- I think that covers the thoughts you have shared here! Again, thanks for surfacing this feedback. Whether negative or positive feedback, we appreciate the time people take to share their experience with us. I look forward to your response so we can continue this conversation.


There is a Jamstack related Slack that was created by Netlify (you can see it mentioned here: Jamstack Community Jamstack). While Netlify do not provide support via it, you can receive support/recommendations from other Netlify users.


(Btw - the spam filter issue is frustrating, I know. But, i personally feel strongly that stricter spam filtering is better than looser - it makes me pretty happy we have (comparatively) little spam. The moment post more than 1-2 times, your trust level increases, and it becomes much less likely that something gets auto-flagged.)


Basically I think Discord was designed to be open, except we live in a world where there are bad actors. It will be important to do an evaluation of Discord not just on the basis of features, but the overhead and abusive behaviors.


@shrmpy, this is some good insight for us to keep in mind. Echoing Perry, this is one of the things we target with our spam filter. When it comes to this current space, do you have additional suggestions or thoughts for improvements?


@Qwe, as I alluded to, we have exciting news! There is now officially a Jamstack Discord Server. It will be a great place to collaborate on projects-- you can read more about the vision of the space on this blog post!


The Forums will still be one of the primary places for working with the Support Team, so we will still be here for technical questions, etc. Thanks again for reaching out about this. The discord project was in the works for a bit, so we are excited to be able to talk about it now!!


The advantage of having a Discord Server is that little and fast questions for new people could be solved faster since there would have more constant Online people would also be a great place to meet other creators related to Embedded development and exchange experiences


(Keep in mind that questions related to LVGL or would keep being derectioned to this forum but discord would still a option for a less formal and more friendly to new users to met LVGL and quick solve problems)


Basically, Discord uses a role system to establish a hierarchy within the server, typically used to indicate who the important individuals are and who are just regular members of the server. Each role comes with a set of permissions related to editing, configuring, and moderating the server, which can be customized specifically for each role. There are some Discord bots used for moderation, some of which offer free services, while others require payment. These bots can be configured to assist in the overall organization of the servers.


its a cumulative community amount number what that means is with time the server will always get bigger and start finding other people bubbles (because in discord anyone can create a invite link for your server after they joined it and send to a friend)


It used to be a a bad place for discoverability since now it has this page where you search for new servers with the filter you looking for like LVGL Or ESP32 or Arduino Some keywords like those

image19201080 148 KB

the main idea behind having a discord would be much more focused in a place to meet people than to solve questions like the actual forum

if something is going to a way of important discussion and its on discord it could just be transferred to the forum


I see the value of Discord in developing a strong and friendly community but we should really limit its usage to chatting and making connections. With the help of the moderators we should direct the technical questions to the Forum or GitHub.


A discord server however is not a good place to provide support. This is what commonly happens with them is they end up being a place where people start to ask support questions because people are on the server and can get an immediate response. The issue with providing support is there is no history. Other users cannot search for the problem they are having and see if anyone else has had the same problem and what the solution was. You end up getting a mess of repeat support questions. It actually gets pretty annoying to deal with from a support standpoint.


Anyway, if we agree on, there is a larger group of people who would use Discord in association with LVGL we need to create a Discord server. Just need to figure out how to channel their enthusiasm in a constructive way.


The platform caters to a diverse range of users, and new ideas for utilizing Discord will continue to emerge as it evolves. Despite the potential for new features and improvements, it is essential to maintain the core focus on providing support through the forum-like structure that Discord offers.


Additionally, Discord includes a feature that allows users to create a forum-like environment, which could be used for less complicated questions or for questions less related to LVGL it self but to Embedded development heres a print of a example of it from another server

image15811003 194 KB

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