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I'm an Australian woman, based in #Meanjin / #Brisbane, but my heart lives in #Argentina. I'm a runner, a cyclist, a board game and TTRPG geek, and I'm fascinated with the #fediverse.

@supakaity and I are co-admins of the embers.social instance

Estoy aprendiendo #español y a veces mi toots estará en mal español!

I have an alt account at @[email protected], which is focused more on queer and trans community and activism.
PronounsShe/Her
Fedivangelism and generalist account (on Friendica)@[email protected]
Queer Stuff account (on Calckey)@[email protected]
Lemmy@[email protected]
Bookwyrm@[email protected]
Pixelfed@[email protected]
@jojobii @ipg cough cough spoutible cough cough

the framing of mastodon having attrition problems bafflingly misses what's interesting here

mastodon's new user retention rate being as high as it is, despite there being no UX team designing shady psychological tricks into the service/apps to keep you coming back, is a pretty big deal

like, let's be honest, there's very little about mastodon that's making us want to return here compulsively or addictively the way so many for-profit services implicitly aim for

it's pretty much just the people

Okay, people need to understand that just because search works a certain way on Mastodon doesn't mean it works the same way across the Fediverse.

Here's three examples from:

1. Calckey
2. Pleroma
3. Friendica

I did a search for "cow".

Notice this search term has no hashtag.

Also I'm getting results from people that I don't follow.

Just because you post FROM Mastodon doesn't mean that your posts are not discoverable elsewhere.

Discourse is adding ActivityPub support, and requesting feedback on their lemmy-inspired proposed spec for how it will work

https://lemmy.ml/post/753900

Discourse is adding ActivityPub support, and requesting feedback on their lemmy-inspired proposed spec for how it will work - Lemmy

@Ada @defcon42/Mirko @[email protected] To me, it sounds more like some #Mastodon users, especially those who came in through the #TwitterMigration, actually can't stand there being something else in the #Fediverse than their beloved Mastodon. When they caught their first glimpse of the Fediverse beyond Mastodon, they reacted much like the people of Krikkit when they caught their first glimpse of the universe beyond Krikkit: "It has to go!"

They make themselves and each other believe that Mastodon is superior to any other Fediverse project in just about any regard imaginable while apparently completely refusing to learn about those other projects. They're supported in their belief by mass media only ever writing about Mastodon and the number of Mastodon users.

However, mass media only write about Mastodon because they simply don't know a thing about the rest of the Fediverse, and they didn't know a thing about Mastodon until the #TwitterTakeover had actually happened, and the second wave of former #birbsite users had come flooding into Mastodon in such numbers that it was impossible to ignore even for those who act as if #FLOSS doesn't exist.

As for the numbers of Mastodon users, they're so high because I guess more than 90% of all Mastodon users still don't know that the Fediverse is not only Mastodon, because they have never heard of anything else in the Fediverse. Mastodon was pretty much the only Fediverse project advertised on #BirbSocial when this was still possible.

There are various reasons why Mastodon users don't spread across the Fediverse in masses. None of it is because Mastodon is superior to everything else because, truth be told, it isn't. I'll come to this later. One reason is, again, that the vast majority of them still don't know anything else. Another one is because it was hard enough to get used to Mastodon after years of using #Twitter, and they don't want to get used to yet another platform. And another one is that it's hard to move from Mastodon to something else and take your account or at least your connections with you.

Another reason may be because people don't need anything beyond microblogging, and that's what Mastodon does. Now, sorry for all those of you who fight tooth and claw to defend Mastodon against the competition, but #Akkoma does microblogging, too. With extra features beyond Mastodon, some of which Mastodon users have been pestering Eugen Rochko to include in Mastodon for ages (e.g. "quote retweet"). All while being more lightweight and requiring fewer server resources than Mastodon. Oh, and it federates with Mastodon.

Other Fediverse projects aren't even competition for Mastodon because they specialise in something else. @Pixelfed specialises in posting pictures, much like #Instagram. @PeerTube specialises in video upload and streaming, not too dissimilarly from #YouTube. #Plume and #WriteFreely specialise in distraction-free traditional blogging, much like #Medium. #Lemmy specialises in groups and posting and discussing news, much like #Reddit or #HackerNews. You can't claim that Mastodon is better at each of these things than these platforms.

And then there are the jacks-of-all-trades which are usually filed under either "macroblogging" or "like #Facebook ". They weren't launched to have something that goes beyond Mastodon because their history reaches far back before Mastodon. Mastodon was launched in 2016 (and not 2022 like many believe). #Friendica was launched in early 2010, even before the crowdfunding campaign for the development of #Diaspora started. And in that early stage, Friendica, then still named #Mistpark, was vastly more powerful than Diaspora* ever got and also vastly more powerful than Mastodon 13 years later.

#Hubzilla, created by the same man as Friendica, is the most extreme one of them all. For starters, it eliminates the need for multiple accounts by having multiple independent channels with separate identities on the same account. Each channel can have multiple profiles like on Friendica so you can present your channel differently to individual contacts or groups of them and differently again to the general public.

It can do micro- and macroblogging with 50,000 or more characters and just about everything that can be done with #BBcode (italics, bold type, underline, lists with bullet points or numbers, quotes, code blocks), and you can embed as many pictures as you want in your posts where you want them instead of them automatically being attached to the end of the post.

Group handling in Hubzilla is much easier than list handling in Mastodon. You never have to type the name of a contact to find them. You can edit contacts and add them to groups or remove them, and you can edit groups and add or remove contacts, all with a few mouse clicks. And while Mastodon shows a maximum of four lists on the main page, Hubzilla will give you easy access to all your groups.

On top of that, you can have
  • very fine-grained access rights control with pre-definable contact roles
  • forums (just like Friendica, Hubzilla has #Guppe built in)
  • more elegant macroblogging with articles which, in addition to BBcode, support #Markdown
  • simple webpages (or not so simple if you're the admin of a hub, and you can expand it further)
  • wikis (I'm not even kidding)
  • a public calendar
  • a virtually unlimited number of private calendars with #CalDAV connection
  • a virtually unlimited number of address books with #CardDAV connection
  • a file server with #WebDAV connection with its own access rights management which also ties in with the Photos and optional Gallery app (Mastodon drops your pictures somewhere, Hubzilla lets you upload them to your personal cloud space where you can access them whenever you want)

All with one run-of-the-mill Hubzilla account. And once per channel, separately.

And as if that wasn't enough, Hubzilla introduced the #Zot protocol and with it a concept named #NomadicIdentity.

Mastodon and Friendica let you have multiple accounts, even on separate instances. They also support migration from one account to another, and unlike Mastodon, Friendica lets you take all your content with you. Hubzilla (and #Streams, the successor of its slimmed-down successor, still created by the same guy) goes even further: Not only can you easily move from one hub to another, you can have channels on multiple hubs and automatically keep them fully in sync! If one hub goes down, it doesn't matter because you've got everything on all your other accounts.

Last but not least, both Friendica and Hubzilla federate with almost everything that moves, even far beyond the #ActivityPub Fediverse. This could be Diaspora*, this could be #GNUsocial, this could be #Wordpress blogs with or without the ActivityPub add-on, this could be RSS feeds (and they both generate feeds themselves, so this is bidirectional, too), this could even be Twitter until the API is shuttered. Friendica even used to federate with Facebook until Facebook put rocks in the way; this is the only connector that Hubzilla didn't take over.

The obvious downside is that for someone who just came in from the #birdcage, all this is utter overkill. In fact, people who are used to Mastodon may find Friendica borderline unusuable due to its many features. And Hubzilla is so infamous for its own clumsy UI capitulating before its sheer power that even Friendica users find it hard to use, fresh converts from Twitter to Mastodon even more so.

Some design decisions may be hard to understand for outsiders. Converts from other Fediverse projects to Hubzilla regularly fail at something as seemingly similar as connecting to users on other ActivityPub-based projects until you tell them that ActivityPub is an optional app on Hubzilla that has to be activated first because Hubzilla concentrates on Zot with its Nomadic Identity.

Also, just because these projects offer so much power, that doesn't mean that everyone needs it. If you do, it can be convenient to have it all under one login. But if all you're looking for is a bit of microblogging and online socialising, you don't need to drag a CMS and a full-blown cloud server with all bells and whistles along with you that just clutter up the UI. In that case, projects like Mastodon and Akkoma win because they're more approachable.

And while Friendica, Hubzilla & Co. can do threaded discussions and even have something like forums, Lemmy can do this more elegantly because it specialises in it. While you can use Hubzilla's private calendar feature for event planning, it's easier to do the same with #Mobilizon which, again, specialises in it. Or you can host podcasts on Friendica, Hubzilla & Co, but you can host them better on #Funkwhale and even better on #Castopod.

Wanting the Fediverse to be only Mastodon hinders development, namely the development of new projects within the Fediverse that may be able to do all-new things that we haven't seen in the Fediverse yet. Things that, sorry to say again, you'll never be able to do with Mastodon.

P.S.: For extra kicks, don't just read this on Mastodon. Open my original post; there you can see what Hubzilla is capable of, and what Mastodon strips away.
Netzgemeinde/Hubzilla

Friendica timelines are compelling

There's something about the method that Friendica uses to generate timelines that I find really compelling, and that doesn't seem to be talked about much. F...

I put together a list of essays on the fediverse and Mastodon that includes great pieces by (among others): @atomicpoet @mmasnick @deadsuperhero @[email protected] @elipariser @judell

I'd be grateful for suggested additions that you find valuable!

https://bit.ly/fediverse-essays

Fediverse & Mastodon Essays

Essays Fediverse & Mastodon Essays Compiled by David Slifka, @[email protected] / [email protected] Submit additions at <a href="https://forms.gle/FzhFnJp1ajiwn3cV7">https://forms.gle/FzhFnJp1ajiwn3cV7</a> List is unsorted. Inclusion is not an endorsement of content. Essay?,Topic/Catego...

Google Docs

iOS devs, you should follow the progress of @tootsdk.

It not only gives you a library for Mastodon but much of the greater Fediverse, including Pleroma, Pixelfed, and Writefreely.

How might this work with your app? Check out this chart!

https://github.com/tootsdk/tootsdk

GitHub - TootSDK/TootSDK: Cross-platform Swift library for Mastodon and the fediverse

Cross-platform Swift library for Mastodon and the fediverse - TootSDK/TootSDK

GitHub
Okay that's enough dev for 1 day. My weather bot is now up and running at @weather so give it a follow if you want #Brisbane weather updates every hour or so. Weather data is from https://openweathermap.org and I'll release the source code a bit later so anyone can contribute to future development. Boosts welcome. Thanks all!
Current weather and forecast - OpenWeatherMap

OpenWeather provides comprehensive weather data services, including current, forecast, and historical weather information. Explore a wide range of APIs for solar radiation, road risk assessment, solar energy prediction, and more, with global coverage and user-friendly access. Ideal for developers and businesses seeking accurate and reliable weather insights.

@kcarruthers @atomicpoet @tguarna @Jdreben

Thanks Kate. I spun up #FediverseAU precisely because of this eventuality.

There's a whole book in Twitter and its value as an academic network - adaptive systems, eocsystems, world systems literature, and how Twitter's structural changes affect the broader #higherEd communications network.

Universities *won't* spin up their own infrastructure, IMHO. I worked in an IT Dept of a major Australian University for 16 years - their focus is on outsourcing everything.

They don't *build* or *maintain* a lot anymore - they are *integrators*. Until one of their corporate providers offers Mastodon as a Service, they won't run their own.

Perhaps #AARNet will run a whole-of-uni Mastodon, like it used to run whole-of-uni videoconferencing. That's a possibility.

Moreover, no university department is going to want to own #moderation of Mastodon instances - in the same way that Marketing departments want to control university websites, but don't want to be responsible for all that distributed content authorship entails.

There's no tangible, immediate value in hosting a Mastodon instance - because if the institution can't control the message, why would they provide the infrastructure?

We all know the power of #networks, the power of #connection and the power of #ecosystems
But that power is emergent, and intangible, and cannot be quantified in a business case 🎓