PSA: Let’s fill Kbin/Lemmy with content to attract and KEEP new users
We’re about to enter another Reddit mass migration phase starting tonight. We’ve already attracted the users most actively engaged with the protests and Reddit’s changes—users who are driven enough to put in the effort to grow the Fediverse.
Now we need to make it feel like home to casual users and lurkers. Not just attract them for a few visits, but keep it interesting enough that they stay here in the coming weeks/months.
Major kudos to all the developers working day and night to bring us familiar-feeling apps and interfaces on insanely short timelines. But what can the rest of us do to make Kbin and Lemmy feel like home to all the new Reddit refugees? Populate Lemmy and Kbin with as much quality content as you can find!
Over the next few weeks, fill your magazines/communities with as much good the content as you can. Post comments and subscribe to things. Click that upvote button on content or comments you like.
Not sure where to find good content? Ironically, check out your favorite subreddits for ideas. Make sure we have the best of the content you can find on Reddit. See a good article or link? Post it here! Don’t be shy about posting to interactive communities like Ask Lemmy- we’re after volume.
For OC Reddit posts, see if there’s a non-Reddit page to post here. I don’t know whether it’s acceptable to copy text posts, but if you do, make sure you at least give credit/copy a link to the original post.
Basically, do everything you can to engage over the next few weeks and avoid lurking. Show off the Fediverse and welcome the next group of Reddit refugees to their new home.
Edit: I completely forgot to call out all the people hosting and upgrading instances to help with the massive influx of users and keep the sites stable. Thank you, hosts!
Absolutely, I'm way more actively engaged on Lemmy than I was in the recent past on Reddit. I feel like the community isn't too flooded yet, and conversation can be more easily seen. I'm very excited for the future here.
Thank you. As a recent refugee I like that lemmy can fill a void but it’s going to take community effort to have the engagement and diversity that Reddit did. As a decade long Reddit lurker I’ve decided that my lemmy experience will be better if I upvote the things that contribute, comment instead of just lurking, and rather than expecting to jump into this expecting the traffic and variety of the old place, I and the other refugees have an opportunity to make our little spaces in the fediverse a little brighter and grow with the community. It’s an exciting time after the dread of the deadline began to grow. I’m happy I’m here, and I’m happy you (and everyone) are here! Let’s grow together!
Quality content is one thing. Engagement is another. I see lots of new posts that are good, but little to no comments. What we need is a few good communities with lots of engagement. On reddit I was more of a lurker, here I will start to do my best to comment more in the hopes it helps. (Still, my comments will probably be stupid and uninteresting, so it might do more harm than good, lol)
I was on reddit mostly logged out on the phone and always logged in on my pc resulting in little or no interaction at all. Why? Different default homepage feeds, and it's easier to accidentally upvote or downvote when scrolling on phone. It's time for me to step up my game here.
We'll get there - it's just about chatting when you have something to offer; we get to be the stimuli, the response or both
Like, for me, I don't start conversations particularly often - but I can certainty riff on topics fed add things along the way once the ball is rolling. That's why I've always been more of a comments section person. Guess I'll have to step out and try posting more!
Yeah it’s kind of amusing. I’ve gotten so used to mindlessly doom scrolling and here it’s like damn can’t just lurk there’s not enough to just lurk over. Lord I have to use that keyboard thingie and form sentences.
Honestly same, like I genuinely want lemmy to succeed but unsure since most of the communities I frequent are still on Reddit (mostly gacha games subs)
I’m still trying to engage more here than I usually do on Reddit
I got started with browsing the most popular communities (if you're on a browser, click Communities in the upper left, then pick All under List of communities) and picking the ones that seemed interesting. Then I started searching for ones that mirrored my subreddits and other interests. One thing to note is that Lemmy is growing so fast that you'll often find more than one community about the same topic, so don't be shy about subscribing to somewhat duplicative communities until one comes out on top.
There are still some subreddits that don't have an equivalent here yet, so I check back for those every few days to see if anyone has gotten around to them (I'm definitely not up for moderating myself)
As @[email protected] posted, you can also use https://browse.feddit.de/ to quickly search for communities and see their subscriber, post and comment count to gauge how active they are.
Welcome!
Edit: I just learned about lemmyverse.net which is an even better website to browse both instances and communities. Check it out!
Thanks for the run down, appreciate the detailed explanation! Great idea about finding mirror communities from Reddit.
One thing to note is that Lemmy is growing so fast that you'll often find more than one community about the same topic, so don't be shy about subscribing to somewhat duplicative communities until one comes out on top.
This bring back fond memories of browsing early Reddit lol
Note if you find a community somewhere and you don't see it in your instance that means no one has subscribed to it yet. You'll have to paste the whole url on the search bar and wait maybe 30 seconds.
Yeah. Sometimes it feels like it's just people patting themselves on the back for not using Reddit, which is completely ok, but I'd also like to see other stuff. Like from subreddit I used to subscribe to.
I get it. It's cathartic, and it's nice to vent about it. It was similar during the digg > Reddit migration and it will naturally end on it's own, but I do hope it doesn't last too long.
I for one propose more robust ways of finding communities. Maybe if communities adopted a policy of using keywords or hashtags so it can be easier to find all the places where specific topics are being discussed...? I don't know, I'm brand spanking new and trying to find my way; the first thing on my mind is: where am I, where is everything in reference to me, and how do I find out?
And don't forget to set your home instance by clicking the house at the top. Then all the links take you to the appropriate page on your instance so you can subscribe!
Same. I try to find alternatives to the subreddits I used to follow, but aside from technology subs, I don't see much of what I remember, even after using the search function in Connect. Not sure how good it is though
Beehaw is great, actually. Some things should not be tolerated.
I'm tired of basically every other place on the internet tolerating shitty people because of "freedom of speech" or whatever, poisoning the discussion and making it suck to actually participate.
It's good to have a place where people actually operate on good faith, and not just to fight like everywhere else because they appeal to the lowest common denominator. Just look at how often reddit was criticized for being toxic. If you just allow everything, that is what will inevitably happen. You have to work to prevent that.
Yeah miss me with the self-righteous, hateful toxicity of pre-2012 Reddit. I left because Reddit made the user experience horrible by shutting down better apps while their own was still abysmal. Idk anything about how ban-happy specific communities are here, but I understand if heavier moderating is needed at the beginning to prevent this place from turning into Voat
Like I said in another post. Reddit active monthly is 1.6 billion . Beehaw have trouble dealing with few thousand users from 2 biggest instances, lemmy.world and sh.itjust.works. Lemmy instances needs money, we can get more money by getting more users, which means more money going towards Lemmy and the fediverse. We need to start taking money out of the trillion dollar tech giants and the profits going towards instance owners, mods and devs that make Lemmy great. If beehaw is trying to make a instance to feel safe towards advertisers and give beehaw money, I understand that. However we haven't reach that critical mass yet.
I know, but in my view if I want the fediverse to become mainstream, we need a way for 1.660 billion monthly active users to feel free and jump straight into the fediverse. Admins will need to find a way to monetize their instance, like ads or fediverse awards. So the instance owner can be not only cover server costs, it's will be their job, get devs on board for FOSS development, grow the community and make the fediverse 1000% better. We need to start small first, that means we need play nicely to each other— so users that come on this board can consume content from other instances about the confusion of defederation.
They already did. Every user wants their specific admin led circlejerk with no disent. Else you're a nazi. You don't like it? Make your own instance.
Lemmy is not it, as it stands. Not whil users di y have cross instance user control and don't depend on admins which are a worse version of power hungry Reddit mods with a more fanatical crowd.
Cross-instance control of your identity would be nice but it's easy enough to just make multiple accounts and manage them easily in your browser and every app under the sun. We are much less beholden to power tripping arseholes here than on a platform like Reddit.
Thank you for everyone's efforts to make the shift from Reddit as smooth as possible. I am normally a lurker/casual Redditor and will likely continue to be so in the Fediverse, but I want to say how much I greatly appreciate how welcoming people have been. I really hope the transition goes as smoothly for original users, and I will do my best to be as minimally invasive as possible.
I am not sure how confident people are in a) switching from Reddit to Lemmy and b) hearing from it in the news or elsewhere, wanting to join the „fastest growing community“ and have no idea about Reddit so far.
It took me (coming from Reddit) about 2h to overview the alternatives, understand the fediverse structure and its jargon, decide between several instances, find and subscribe to similar communities (not only local ones) and finally write my first comment and post.
I seen a single post recommending Lenny.world and the wefwef iOS app and was up and running two minutes later. Zero clue about the fediverse structure but I can doom scroll and upvote so I’m happy.
I just want to say that you have invested the 2h not only for Lemmy. It took me minutes for this account because I was already familiar with the Fediverse. If you want to switch within the Fediverse in the future, I'm sure it will be easy for you•
I skipped most of that, just because someone gave me the advice "just sign up for lemmy.world". Might not be perfect for everyone but it is good enough in most cases.
Interesting! I was actually surprised how smooth it was. Installed the Connect app I found mentioned on reddit which looks similar to reddit apps. Registered, thoguth "lemmy.world" sounded nice (at this point I knew there are different instances, but that it does not matter too much). And then I started browsing.
Same here. I saw a post on Reddit saying join kbin or lemmy.world and then got on and saw a post mentioning apps being worked on, and a day or two later installed Liftoff, which is already from an established defunct lemmy app, and I was odd to the races.
I figure I will suss out the details of how to subscribe to other magazines and all the bells and whistles as I go. Glad to be here though.
Same here. I saw a post on Reddit saying join kbin or lemmy.world and then got on and saw a post mentioning apps being worked on, and a day or two later installed Liftoff, which is already from an established defunct lemmy app, and I was odd to the races.
I figure I will suss out the details of how to subscribe to other magazines and all the bells and whistles as I go. Glad to be here though.
Okay, so I've been here for a few days and I'm getting increasingly confused. I used reddit exclusively on mobile and was hoping to do the same thing for lemmy. But it seems like every app has major features missing. I've already tried 4 different apps and every one is missing a feature I'd consider critical. Keeping two accounts separate, adjusting settings for two different accounts, commenting, replying, posting, subscribing, and searching for specific instances are all pretty important, but every app is missing one or more of these features.
Is there a quickstart guide anywhere to get more familiar with this? Does anyone know of an app that can do all of this? I've already tried jerboa, summit, connect, and liftoff
Does WefWef have a way to block users? This is the critical feature for me. Way too many hateful people spewing disinformation out there, not interested in seeing it.
Unfortunately none of these apps are made by large teams, most actually being largely done by one person so yeah there's features missing because they've never really had cause to sink a ton of time into their development (and a bunch of them are also just new). Only real solution is you just have to wait until they catch up. Also there's the existing Reddit apps migrating over, but those are probably still weeks away. But I can tell you there's a lot of active development going on, it's just that, with the exception of Jerboa which is maintained by the full time Lemmy Devs (who also have to maintain Lemmy itself) and the Reddit 3PAs maybe, we're not really doing this full time and have regular jobs to go to.
I hope that my comment didn't read as me complaining. I fully understand that this is different from reddit and I'm grateful to every developer working on lemmy in any capacity.
I just wanted to be sure I tried all of the popular options to find what works best before fully committing to one. Out of the four, liftoff seems to be the best. The main issue it got with it is that both accounts share the same settings. If I change a setting for one account, it changes the settings for the other as well.
I'm in the same boat. I'm using Lemmy on Jerboa, Wefwef, connect and Lemmy.nz itself. Still haven't found a favourite and run into small issues with all.
But there are updates almost every day, sync is coming as well, so I just stick around. It's much better than Reddit in all regards.
Try out liftoff, so far I've found it to be much more reliable and logical than Jerboa, I believe it's based on boost for Reddit, but I have no idea; I came from Reddit if Fun
I'm using mobile web but I'm having this issue (maybe intended) that I can never get just a stable list of things to look at, comments or posts, sorted in some sort of static way. When I say I want the hot posts on "all", after a few seconds a post that was posted less than a minute ago will pop up on the top, pushing the content around. This comment section is sorted by hot and the first comment has -1 points so I doubt it's working as intended. Plus comments get pushed in the top too, so my page is always scrolling and I cant keep my place.
A few of the developers of Reddit apps like Sync are now working on Lemmy versions. So I guess give it some time and hopefully your preferred app for Reddit will make it's way over or have a clone with all the features you're looking for.
Try liftoff, as far as I can tell the accounts are kept separate, with the option of having a combined feed (which tells you which instances the post your viewing is being served from) or a separate feed for each instance you're on
I don't mean to sound like a dick, but this isn't reddit, it's basically brand new. It hasn't been around for nearly 20 years, and it has had mobile apps for weeks/months, not for over a decade. You gotta be patient, more features,more stability, more ease of use, all of that will come. Reddit didn't even have subreddits for like the first two years or so.
If it helps, the Sync for Reddit dev, a fairly major player in the 3rd party app scene, is making Sync for Lemmy. They're hoping to get something usable out in 6-8 weeks, and long term goal is to bring it up to and hopefully beyond S for R's standards.
Cool well... give it a minute, you know? Some of the reddit apps have been in development for YEARS. So you're not going to get to switch and immediately have every single thing you're asking for in an app because the user base was non existent until basically the last two weeks.
The apps are all still very new. The pace of development has been, however, absolutely astonishing. There are almost as many apps for Lemmy as there are for reddit. I am left speechless at the speed of development, truly.
Having said that, some things are not a priority, as you are probably aware.. Support for 2 accounts is one of them. may I ask why you need 2 accounts? I remind you that you don't have to have accounts in every server in order to cross-interact. An account on lemm.ee can give you access to pretty much every lemmy instance. That is the power of federation.
There are many reasons why you might want or need 2 accounts. Maybe you started on beehaw and want access to Lemmy.world content, or vice versa. Maybe you started on an instance and realised they don't do image hosting but you've already built up some activity on that account and don't want to completely give it up, so you create another one. Or maybe, just simply, you create an account on an instance only to find another you prefer the URL of but don't want to give up previous activity. Many reasons!
I don't think I'm understanding. This Lemmy business has been a mess to navigate, I am up to six accounts on Lemmy for different versions. What I am trying to figure out, is why can I sort by 'Top', select 'All' which says it included other communities, but the selection of posts shown with those settings has been different for Kbin, VLemmy, LemmyNSFW, and lemmy.world? If I do this on kbin for example, almost every top post in all is from kbin, same goes for VLemmy, etc etc. Where the heck can I go, and sort by all, to see the top posts of ALL of these Lemmy instances?
You really don't need 6 accounts, it's probably easier to use 1 for all of Lemmy.
Anyways, I think there's nothing that can really be done about "All" being different for all instances, at least not right now. On a smaller instance, you'll see a lot more stuff from other instances, and on a bigger instance you'll see a bunch of stuff from that instance, they seem to prefer posts from themselves.
I don't really know how it works, but that's what I've seen. Honestly, it's not a deal breaker.
i know you can just have one account but what people keep ignoring is that when a post links to another instance, you need to log into it. cross posts work well but if you interact with it, you need to log into their instance.
I think it's supposed to be like that. The Fediverse is a decentralized platform.
Each instance you login to is considered Local but you can subscribe to communities hosted on other instances too. When you sort by All it shows the local instance posts + your subscribed communities' posts.
Oh ok? I feel like that makes this not a Reddit competitor then, there are far too many instances with the same community names run by different people posting different or the same exact content. I kind of get the federated bit but now if I want to find what equates to a gaming subreddit I have to search on an external website to find probably 10+ communities by the same name that I now need to monitor for a few days to see which has the content I'm looking for... that's a LOT of work to do to find a single community as opposed to using reddit where I look up gaming and then join r/gaming.
Due to the nature of how Lemmy works, it would be rather difficult to make a tool that federates every instance. Also, some instances block others for various reasons. Lemmy works by federating an instance if any interaction with the other instance is made, so if a user on x.com were to read the comments of a post made by y.com (which is already federated with x.com) and upvoted a comment by z.com (which is not federated yet), it will start federating posts from z.com
I think it's good to encourage those who still have reddit accounts to migrate their content over here in anyway they can before deleting their account entirely. They may have content that they can post that would be beneficial to keep but starve that content from reddit.
It's the strongest weapon you can unleash against that cesspit of a platform. New content is being made here daily and it's amazing, but we have a way to go to compete with such a goliath content farm.
Damn good idea. I'm a gamedev and posted a hell of a lot of my work on reddit, so I've been hesitant to delete it entirely, because i have an audience, however minor, over there, and a record of progress and contributions to the community. But, as you say, i could just repost it all over here.
Honestly, I was hoping smarter folks would've figured an easy way to port subs, content etc or make it easier for user to bring their selected content to Lemmy.
I'm all for rebuilding, but feels like a missed opportunity.
I'm thinking about doing that. There's no reason one couldn't make a web scraper and just scrape some list of subs and run it through a particular mirror instance of lemmy which other instances would be able to federate with. It just seemed like there wouldn't be interest in such an idea
I'll try my best to participate. I've always been more of a lurker on Reddit ( due to some social anxieties ) but I'll try my best to participate. I would love for Lemmy/Kbin to keep the momentum going.
Just signed up yesterday. I had my carefully curated feed from almost ten years and now just trying to find my feet. I've subscribed to 1 community (memes) but do feel kinda lost. I keep hearing about instances and what's allowed and what isn't in each. I'm not sure where to find the stuff I like.
Someone can probably explain the Fediverse far better than I could. Simple explanation though is that any instance you're on you can see things from others as well.
If you're looking for new communities to join check out:
I know how you feel.
Been trying to find communities that kinda mirror my subreddit selection. I'm pretty sure more are going to come.
As far as instances go, don't think too much about for now. Find communities via the search function and subscribe.
Are you using any lemmy app right now? I'd recommend trying jerboa, atleast till the sync/boost apps are here in a few weeks. You can try to use the search function to find communities/subreddit.
You can think of an instance as a new reddit. So for eg, you can host a reddit called caboose and I can host one with my name. You can have your rules on what's allowed on your instance. In addition, we can create a "subreddit" called memes on both our instances. You probably want to join the one with the most users. Assuming the meme community on the caboose instance has more users, I'd just join that. Once it reaches critical mass, that'll become the default memes community on the fediverse! The people on my instance of reddit would just use the memes community on your instance since it's all interlinked.
To start, I would suggest browsing via all. Joining communities with high user engagement for now. The niche communities will take time to migrate. In addition, when you search for a community, join the one which has the most users.
Go to the Communities tab, set it to All and then search for topics. You'll likely get a list of relevant communities across the Fediverse. Yes this will likely include several identically named ones like [email protected] and [email protected]. You might find that there are ten of them, and two with more than a single digit number of subscribers. Probably go with the most popular unless it's somewhere you really don't want to interact with. Occasionally check out your Local (communities only on your instance) and All (communities everywhere on the Fediverse) feeds, and you might find some traffic you're interested in. I don't think we have one of those insidious engagement-powered algorithms yet.
New to Lemmy (I've deleted my reddit account today).
Some questions for the experienced users (I'm still a little overwhelmed with how Lemmy works):
Is enough to join one server? there are benefits/cons joining more than one?
For each server I join I'll have a different user?
There’s usually no need to join multiple servers. The only really reason would be if the communities you want to interact with are in instances that aren’t very well federated (ie connected to lots of other instances). Then you may want accounts on the more isolated instances to access that content and an account on a more mainstream instance to give you access to the rest of Lemmy’s content.
Managing multiple accounts can be tricky, but I’ve heard some of the apps are good at aggregating the content across multiple accounts. I only have one Lemmy account though so I don’t have firsthand experience.
Thanks for the clarifications, people!
Another note, i was looking for an android app to use access Lemmy on the mobile.
The app Litoff was recommended.
I agree. It's really nice..
I've started using the app Jerboa on Android, and I'm quite happy with it so far. It is from the same github user Dessalines who created Lemmy. I had to wait until the instance I use updated to version 0.18, though.
I started using wefwef (terrible name though) and it's my favorite ui wise by far. It's a progressive web app so you can save it to the homescreen and it performs even better
I think you would have to have multiple accounts if you wanted to start/moderate communities on multiple instances. I...think?...you're only allowed to start/mod communities on your home instance.
I had zero problems with sh.itjust.works sign-up. I got my email verification in seconds! And from what I have read, it doesn't really matter which instance you choose so long as it hasn't been defederated.
But how does one know this instance will exist in a year? This was my hangup on Lemmy, was as I understand it, you lose your account and posts will be pruned if your instance goes down.
Yeah. That's one of the problems with ActivityPub services. You need to know which instance to join, but there's no way to know which one will fit you best.
I made multiple accounts on the different instances. Right now Lemmy.world is down, but this one isn't. Connect for Lemmy (android) has an easy way to switch accounts and instances.
Lemmy needs to come up with some kind of system to keep people from spamming posts. There's no reason scrolling by new should be half filled with 4 accounts spamming posts in the same community or even across multiple communities. Something like a set amount of time between posts or something idfk.
Edit: It also needs to let me view my profile without having to go back to the top of the feed
That's a fair point, sorting by new is a great way to hunt for good content and help it get traction, but maybe right now it's more effort than it should be.
Having said this, adding a waiting time before posting again might just as easily prove more inconvenient to legit users than those who spam posts, but I'd support it at least for the time being, as discussion right now is spread over several communities so sorting by new on a single community wouldn't help much most of the times.
The algorithm just needs to be tweaked in a way it's not just true new and instead shuffles between users a bit so it's not just a stream from one person posting a bunch in one go
Well, it seems there is a bit of a learning curve. I, and most likely you, still haven't figured out the mechanics of Lemmy and the federverse. Give it time,
Just like Digg before Reddit, we will soon adept. The apps will get better and things will make more sense.
It may look and work slightly different, but with a little work, maybe this will be the communities that thrives the longest..
At least until the ads, bots, and CEOs begin infesting our home again. then I guess we just got to torch it and build a new home.
Now go unpack your favourite content. Lets make this place sing!
I'm pretty happy with the nicer community so far. Waiting on a few subs, but now that my reddit app is dead, eh. Pretty happy, feels like 2010 reddit again before new reddit, the eternal September of new users, and people being randomly mean. I'm seeing regulars from 10 years ago on reddit, now on lemmy.
I'm still massively confused on the setup. Just like Mastodon, this Lemmy thing pushes fragmentation and technology and I just cannot wrap my head around it.
I would love to have a site ala reddit. There, that is it. I am not super interested in the techniques behind Lemmy but I must because there are 'servers', 'communities', etc. You can join one server but you might not see (or be able to search) other servers or whatever. The fragmentation is related to this point, I am going to have to hunt for specific 'groups' or 'subreddits' if you will, and hope it is complete because maybe another group, on another server, will have other content related to your interrest. I cannot even begin about posting items myself because I am already lost on that one, no idea what server to post or how it will be able to be seen by users.
So I can describe what I would like, so that other can gauge if Lemmy can meet that need, but the fragmentation and technique tells me I am in the wrong place to have this experience.
What I would like: Frontpage with generic 'groups' or 'communities' and my subscribed 'groups' or 'communities', all on the front page/one page, that scrolls continuously without bothering me with 'techniques' (choosing servers for example). I can certainly appreciate the techniques behind Lemmy (or Mastodon) but in the end I want to create 1 account, pull in some 'subreddits' in my account and when I go to the front page, I get to see all the articles related to the 'groups' or 'subreddits'
In short: can I arrange Lemmy/Vlemmy in such a way that I get the same experience as I had on/with reddit?
I am looking for a replacement, not a challenge tbh. Again, fair play on the efforts of the devs but I want to keep my effort at a minimum on this one, I just consume and read news.
Soery if I got confused by your question, but isn't it exactly as it already works???
For transparemcy I use the app connect for lemmy in case it has any unique features.
First of all, resdit had the same problem to a degree, there were similarly named communities + hundreds of communities for the same topi (think about pc gaming or something like that, there wasn't only one subreddit, but one got massively bigger than the others and acted as a default)
Lemmy is sort of the same, when looking for communities search for volume, the ones with the most active users are probably going to be the "official" ones in a sense.
I recommend using
https://lemmyverse.net/communities?order=active&nsfw=null
To search for communities by members, of course you can sinply type the name on a search bar and the communities/magazines will pop up.
On regards to the front page, there already is an equivalent to all in reddit where some communities from different instances pop up. Aside from that you have local, where it is a frontpage but only for those communities hosted in your instance. Finally you have subscribed, that is the equivalent of "hot" ok reddit where it shows you ONLY the communities you are subscribed to.
All this frontline options are available on the browser as well as the apps, that is why I am confused by your question, is this not what you are looking for? Or am I misunderstanding something.
Don't doubt to keep asking in case I wasn't clear :)
Forgot to mention, but you aren't supposed to choose a server/instance and stick with it, just use the search function and it will lead you to communities from different servers and sometimes different sites (for example, a beehive community or a kbin magazine instead of something on lemmy) don't worry too much about in which instance something is, just subscribe to the community and it will appear on your frontpage.
You're over thinking it, all you need is one account, then browse, the other comment before me had some good advice as well, but I just wanted to add for others reading this that while I understand it seems so at first, once you're in and subscribed to a few things you do get your infinite scrolling experience, very easy.
That's the really great part for me: there's no incentive to keep people engaged on the platform with sleazy manipulation, because they're not selling data and clicks to advertisers. It's a breath of fresh air!
It really feels like we've come full circle back to usenet, and I am loving it.
Just ran PowerDeleteSuite on my account RIGHT now. I initially hated lemmy, but got used to the PC ui, and now the apps are really good. Tired of the bootlickers left at the other place, like....how do you defend a shitty 'company' who doesn't give a shit about you? Crazy.
It's like all the awful people are left there stewing in their own juices, good riddance. I literally can not view that place anymore without Apollo so it's as good as gone. Will still browse the odd time on RES via the PC, or a search engine -reddit for something but casual browsing?............he gone!
One simple thing people could do is posting links, to videos they find interesting, on one of the video communities, like "videos" on lemmy.world for example.
It’s really great! It feels like Apollo did in terms of scrolling and interacting and commenting - and has multiple account support and honestly looks just like Apollo did. Super impressed with how functional wefwef is for a web app.
Thank you for your help! I feel so stupid, but I can't figure out how to go to an address that isn't just a normal link in this app (Connect). But I will keep trying and I'll figure it out! It's actually kind of fun and they say it's good for your brain.
I wish someone would move over like the top 20 posts from r/Hobbydrama and create a Lemmy community. I would, but I don't know how to contact the users anymore without my old app.
There sure is! A few actually, but [email protected] seems to be the only one with real activity.
If you're on a browser, you can search for communities with the search button in the top right. Make sure you set the Search dropdown to Communities and the Subscribed/Local/All option to All. The search can take a little time and it's not predictive, so you may need to search a few times to see everything. For instance, I searched for both aita and asshole to see all the AITA communities.
https://browse.feddit.de/ provides a more user-friendly experience with real-time searching and filters for the different instances in case you don't want to engage with one or it's defederated from your instance. Plus it shows you how many posts and comments each community has so you don't have to click on each one to see how active it is.
Also check out lemmyverse.net for a comprehensive collection of instances and communities. After you find one you like, copy the link into your home instance search, wait a second or two for the result to appear (or refresh after a sec) and then you can subscribe to new communities.
If a community doesn't immediately come up in your instances search bar that means no user there has subscribed there yet. You need to search the full url of the community the first time. Ma takex up to thirty secs to appear but then everyone else can find it easily.
Can you explain the different instances, as if I'm a moron? Or direct me to a resource that explains it? If I'm in reddthat.com do I still have access to the whole Lemmy universe? I can't seem to follow the link you gave me and don't understand why ..
Is kbin broken for anyone else? I tried to sign up a week or so ago, and my account is registered, but I can't use my password, and I can't recover my password, either. After learning kbin tracks all your upvotes, I think I like it better here on Lemmy anyway, though... That sort of information gathering feels like an advertisers wet dream.
Im digging it. Didn’t have big expectations seeing how it’s not a full app. After using it more I keep forgetting that fact. Really does have the Apollo feel.
YW. I also find the web interface tough to use. There are a bunch of good iOS apps in beta (Memmy, Mlem, Launch, etc) that you can get using TestFlight on iPhone. I've heard good things about some of the Android apps like Jerboa, but I haven't used them. There's also the web app Wefwef that looks like a good interface.
If you want to check out the iOS betas, download TestFlight from the app store, then google the app's name + TestFlight , which should take you to the app's Github page with the TestFlight link.
I find the Hot view algorithm kind of glitchy - it always seems to jump to 2-3 year old posts after the first few. I prefer the Top views from the past day or week and the New view. You should be able to set your default view in your settings.
And like salarua said, you can switch between your subscribed communities, local communities (everything on your home instance), and all communities across all instances.
at the top, you'll see three views: Subscribed, Local, and All. Subscribed is your curated view of communities that you subscribed to, Local is a view of all the posts on your instance, and All is a view of all the posts across the entire network
I hardly ever commented on Reddit posts but I feel like for this to work we all need to actively try to engage with the platform, so I’ll be trying my best lol
Along similar lines, I’d like to offer a relatively easy and “organic” approach for Lemmy-ings that want to help the fediverse grow, but aren’t ready to cold turkey quit Reddit’s admittedly still larger pool of posts and comments:
Suggested approach to switching with minimal pain: ** Read-Only on Reddit, Read-Write on Kbin & Lemmy **
Reddit was made by all/many of us (with special nod to mods). Reddit wants to be a media company instead of a community? Fine: switch to consumption only.
This is a LOT easier an approach to follow than principled “I’m only reading Lemmy even if it really doesn’t have the community/posts that I miss” approaches, and in the long term it should still result in a transition of interesting thoughts, memes, etc moving to Lemmy.
This is a confusing buggy mess. The only ones really loving it so far are the fat ass sweaty former Reddit overlord mods. There are a lot of friendlier and easier to use alternatives out there. That, and Reddit isn't going anywhere. You sad fucks can have your little unusable space.