Im joining in on the reddit ditching thing, and was kinda worried at first that i wouldnt be able to like use it the way i did reddit as it feels like a whole new place, but after engaging with posts and people and actually being a part of lemmy rather than being lurk mode all the time i was pleasantly surprised with how easy it is to become a member of the community, theres a reasonable amount of subs (or whatever the other word for em is) that fit my interests, enough linux content and shitposting for my liking, and the overall random posts made by people equally fed up with Leddit. (also i admit i used reddit a little cus there was this post on the fedora sub showing how to fix a sound issue i been having after a recent update)

  • TeaHands@lemmy.world
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    3 years ago

    Pretty great tbh. The tricky thing with being an early adopter is you kind of have to be the change you want to see, but I’m old enough to feel no shame about just barging into places and starting new threads as needed.

    So far started two accounts on two different instances (I like to keep different subjects somewhat separate) and had really cool interactions on both.

    Obviously there are a few UX issues, trying to sub to remote communities is kind of a nightmare, but hopefully I’ve subbed to enough that other people on my instance will find it a bit easier to find them through search.

  • DeltaTangoLima@reddrefuge.com
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    3 years ago

    Quite enjoyable and, since seeing the sub.rehab site someone else posted, even better. I’ve found quite a few subs that have made their way over to Lemmy.

    My only gripe is that quite a few have made their way to lemmy.world, and it’s buckling under pressure. I can’t sign up on that instance, nor can I remotely sub to communities from my own instance. Once that’s resolved, I think I’ll definitely be happy to call Lemmy my new home.

    Can’t go back anyway - deleted my Reddit account.

  • honk@feddit.de
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    3 years ago

    At least on my instance everything is running fast, snappy. I like the clean interface. Haven’t encountered any major bugs yet.

    The only downside for me so far is that there is not a lot to see yet. The only active posts and communities are about lemmy itself. Which is understandable of course but I can’t wait to actually get to the phase where I actually get to experience real content lmao

  • Akhuyan@lemmy.world
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    3 years ago

    While not every community is on Lemmy yet that I visit on Reddit, by people migrating from Reddit to here, hopefully that issue will be solved soon. The community here seems way more welcoming than the Reddit community is too

    • AineLasagna@beehaw.org
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      3 years ago

      I’m sorry - we had to remove your post because you didn’t choose the correct flair out of a possible 3,000 esoteric choices, you didn’t format your post title according to the instructions located on a stone carving in the British Museum, your image had an even number of pixels, and/or you haven’t provided verification pics, a notarized letter, and three character references to our mod team. Please do not try again and have a good day [this action was performed by a bot]

  • Skimmer@lemmy.ml
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    3 years ago

    great, i’ve really liked lemmy so far. its really the first alt big tech platform like this that i’ve gotten into, was never big on mastodon or any of the others out there.

    lemmy is honestly a breath of fresh air. really great platform so far, i think it has very strong potential.

    i still use reddit for some things, but overall i’m starting to use lemmy a lot more. great work from the devs, can’t wait to see the future!

  • pushka@beehaw.org
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    3 years ago

    I like it ~ I joined mastodon but I think it was way too slow to load images - probably joined some dodgy overloaded server (though I like the Reddit format and community better rather than Twitter)

    It’s giving me Reddit 15 years ago vibes - smaller tech-savvy and agile community - my Reddit use was on and off through the years; but I like the idea that each community in the Extended Lemmiverse can all have their own vibes and cultures and implementations of the platform and we can all chat and follow topics together 🕊️

    I’ve only been here a short while; but maybe one thing I’d love is not to see reposts in the /all section ; I know the communities are small and growing and can cross post for more stuff , but I’m sure there could be a way for the system to know that the title and url are the same - so only show one , or auto-merge the comments and prioritise posting your comment to your local community instance’s post Edit - I might try install an instance on my website and try to make a merge function ~

    • bruhsoulz@lemmy.mlOP
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      3 years ago

      yea i think one huge advantage is that theres no specific tos for lemmy as a whole and each instance can just do whatever they want which helps loads when it comes to censorship and moderation, and theres no 1 entity that can just skeet yo off the entire platform if u break some rule (great example is how reddit seems to be silencing ppl promoting lemmy and discussions ab it)

    • NoTime@lemmy.one
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      3 years ago

      Regarding your last paragraph, I agree. I’m subscribed to gaming in lemmy.ml and beehaw so see the same content twice regularly. Duplicate communities raise other concerns for me though:

      Which one is the defacto community to join? Using the Gaming community as an example, maybe one leans more to images and the other has more meaty discussion threads just by way of who has joined those communities - nothing to do with the rules. But if you subscribe to both, the majority of the content may be duplicate posts instead? It’s not clear from the community title alone.

      Is the potential squandered as communities are potentially splintered? Maybe people just stick to one community without joining the other. It’ll take time for a certain community to establish itself as the main community with the highest quality posts, but due to the volume of users on the main instances maybe there won’t be a main community? Or maybe people won’t even be aware of multiple communities for the same topic as the names are different, e.g. football Vs soccer.

      • FuzzyDunlop@slrpnk.net
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        3 years ago

        All this fragmentation will reduce the adoption for sure. No one wants to write to a sub filled with 5 people while another is filled with 5k people. We should adopt one new fresh instance and make it our main, and point people coming from reddit to this new instance.

        • trashcan@sh.itjust.works
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          2 years ago

          That would defeat the point of decentralization. Nothing is stopping you from going to lemmyverse.net searching for a community you want, and only subscribing to the biggest. In time the choice will be more obvious.

    • Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev
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      3 years ago

      I might try install an instance on my website and try to make a merge function

      Awesome! I’m trying to get my feet wet with contributing as well. I don’t know Rust or Psql very well (although I am an experienced MySQL/MariaDB admin) so it’s gonna take a while for me to catch up enough to be useful. I’m trying though :P

      • pushka@beehaw.org
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        3 years ago

        The hardest part is learning /something / and then it’s just transferring over right ?

        Heheheh - I dunno how crazy it’ll be , but no harm in dabbling ~ also it’s cool to have a closed community page just for testing , also wanna test maybe only allowing one lemmy domain to post but allow others to comment , etc

  • mattclassic@lemmy.world
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    3 years ago

    I am so happy this exists. I wish it continued growth and success. It feels like the good old early internet and that’s a very good thing.

  • Contramuffin@lemmy.world
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    3 years ago

    Very buggy, but overall a lot more user-friendly than I expected. The fediverse was a bit difficult to grasp as a concept (especially since all the explanations love to say that it’s like email, which it’s not, and then refuse to clarify further), but I think I got it now. Overall I can see myself moving entirely to lemmy.

  • Herb@lemmy.ml
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    3 years ago

    This feels a lot like Reddit did 15 years ago, when they first introduced subreddits-- like I’m seeing something brand new for the first time, but it’s somehow comfortable and innocent.

  • solrize@lemmy.world
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    3 years ago

    People and posts here are better. Tech experience is worse. The web interface is worse (too much broken JS and websocket crap), I can’t login from a mobile browser, the federation scheme is confusing, the Android app story is not there yet, Jerboa doesn’t support older phones that still work perfectly well with RedReader, yada yada. I have somewhat more retro tastes than probably most of the younguns here, so my thoughts are heading towards writing my own desktop front end. But I don’t feel like I want to attempt mobile development.

  • XPost3000@lemmy.ml
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    3 years ago

    Oh man it has been unironically great! First day I joined there was basically nothing but a meme sublemmy and a couple of tech subs too, but nowadays there are communities popping up left right and center, and I’m seeing so many familiar subs recreated on here, too

    Overall my past week of using Lemmy have been phenomenal, and I’m happy to say that Lemmy has become my mindless scrolling app of choice now

    Edit: correct number of weeks

    • Manticore@beehaw.org
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      3 years ago

      One of many examples of how profit-driven platforms care about engagement quantity over product quality. A lack of stopping points feeds FOMO and keeps people trapped longer, but I doubt many people actively enjoy it.

      I disable it on any platform that lets me - besides, pagination can be cached to return to later. Doomscrolling can be binged but not suspended.

      • SuspiciousUser@lemmy.ml
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        3 years ago

        Exactly so. I’m about a third way through Stolen Focus by Johann Hari. It had a section on infinite scrolling which made me realize it didn’t have it. The book talks a lot about social media’s grip on us.

      • Azeon@lemmy.ml
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        3 years ago

        I have infinite scroll on Old Reddit with RES. What makes not having infinite scroll such a great thing for you?

        • sunaurus@lemm.ee
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          3 years ago

          For me personally, the quality of content drops off very quickly after page 1 (for example on my personal home feed), but with infinite scroll, I found myself very often just wading through the low quality stuff on autopilot without even realizing what I was doing. It’s just a problem that I don’t even have to think about when I don’t have infinite scroll.