Only 3 of those are about sticks but many other posts didn’t stick and so were removed.
The #10M itself was deleted : https://lemmy.world/post/10000000
We could simply ask the administrators, but, just for fun, we could program an algorithm such as the following :
#1 get(the_latest_post, from_the_server) #2 modify its address by adding a small fixed number
(manually adjust this small numbertogetoneofthe next posts before they can be deleted)
#3 get(this_next_post, from_the_server)
Repeating these steps a few times and keeping statistics should allow to answer experimentally the question 😋
Only 3 of those are about sticks but many other posts didn’t stick and so were removed.
The #10M itself was deleted :
https://lemmy.world/post/10000000
I wonder if that’s how it works. Looking at lemmy.world’s timeline, there are only 3 posts after this one that are below 10M, the last one being https://lemmy.world/post/9999924, and the next one https://lemmy.world/post/10000121.
Are that many posts getting deleted, or are they somehow counted in a different way?
We could simply ask the administrators, but, just for fun, we could program an algorithm such as the following :
#1 get(the_latest_post, from_the_server) #2 modify its address by adding a small fixed number (manually adjust this small number to get one of the next posts before they can be deleted) #3 get(this_next_post, from_the_server)
Repeating these steps a few times and keeping statistics should allow to answer experimentally the question 😋
😱