The fact that Lemmy/Kbin is weird and inaccessible to most normal people actually makes it perfect for Redditors
The fact that Lemmy/Kbin is weird and inaccessible to most normal people actually makes it perfect for Redditors
Kbins build docs are a nightmare. I have experience with Linux and docker. Can’t get them to work at all. Closest I get are 500 errors and one can’t find a log tossing errors to explain it to save my life.
Maybe I’m not as well familiarized with the parts and pieces as I thought, though I’ve built plenty of Drupal stacks and the like, even using docker and Ansible etc.
Then I look at PRs showing sql injection fixes and XSS fixes and I’m like…oh
Regardless of the success (or failure) of the blackout what's important is to create an alternative platform to Reddit. The blackout doesn't have much legs because of the lack of alternative. Deep inside we all know that many will just go back to reddit once the blackout will end - it's why the importance of creating an alternative.
Keep boosting Lemmy.
Say I made a post to some specific subreddit from apollo. How does the app decide which lemmy community to use, on which instance? Or if I voted or made a comment, on which post on which community on which instance should it land?
I don't think this is a serviceable idea.
The app doesn't decide which community to post in; you do. When you pick a community for the post to go to, you might pick [email protected], in which case it becomes hosted by the beehaw.org server. Or you might pick [email protected], in which case it's hosted by the lemmy.world server. If you vote or comment on the post that's on beehaw.org, the vote/comment is hosted there as well, and likewise for lemmy.world.
Perhaps the important point is that [email protected] and [email protected] are different communities, just like how [email protected] and [email protected] are different email addresses, even though they're both Neo.
Reddit is going to let RedReader still work [only as long as] they need it for accessibility.
There. Fixed that for ya!
There is some enormous potential opportunities on the horizon that we're well ahead of here. The real issue is, Reddit will have to join us on the fediverse or they will be history.
What we have to do as instances/admins/fedizens (whatever you want to call yourselves) is build the future we want. It will be quirky - but at some point that quirkyness is exactly what people want in the end.
It's still early days, and kbin and Lemmy are experiencing a massive influx of Reddit users.
I would compare it to Mastodon just after Elon Musk took over Twitter. Giant influx, and for a few weeks it was full of people talking about Twitter. But then they got that out of their system and started talking about other stuff, and now Twitter only comes up if Musk does something really, really, really stupid.
I expect Lemmy and kbin will follow a similar trajectory. There will be a period when it's all Reddit sucking all the time, but people will soon enough start using them to share news and links.
now Twitter only comes up if Musk does something really, really, really stupid.
So... any day that ends in 'y'?
I think so, true commitment for this community is what makes it more interesting.
Still Reddit has the perks of being the source for tons of Google searches and less experienced users which brings lots of interesting topics/solutions etc.
But being away of repost, ads, influencers and that kind of shit is reassuring not gonna lie lol.
i think accessibility is why lemmy has such an "Old Internet" vibe to it. there are probably a lot of people here that joined reddit over a decade ago (my account turned 11 this year).
that and, there's no reason to tie your real identity to your account. i think about the difference between lemmy and mastodon (aside from mastodon being like twitter). i look at mastodon maybe a few times a month, but when i do look at it, i see people using their real identities and posting as if it's a piece of their professional career
Not necessarily.
Something like Facebook is still useful for keeping in touch with extended family and social circles. I may not particularly care about great uncle John, but it's nice to be aware that he's in the hospital after a bad fall without that information going through 5 rounds of the telephone game.
Somewhere like Reddit or the fediverse? I would never want my real identity associated with these accounts. It's nice to have some anonymity.
Facebook in specific? Sure.
But the idea of platform meant for keeping in loose direct contact with your extended family and social group? That has merit.
I mean the only people who are gatekeeping are those that prevent themselves from joining because they are unwilling to work out how the fediverse and by extension Lemmy work and how it's actually surprisingly easy to use, once you get used to it.
In other words people's fear of change is the true gatekeeper here.
Still annoying, but so long as we don't try to make it harder for these people to adapt than it already is, I think there should be no problems.