This question is especially for people who have joined in the last week. Have you used other fediverse platforms or is this your first time really using one? What do you think of it so far? Are you aware that you can comment on Lemmy posts with a Mastodon account?

  • oldindianmonk@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Yes. I did try Mastodon during the Twitter fiasco. But the whole fediverse concept seems a little more suited for specific forums like Reddit

  • hoodlem@hoodlem.me
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    1 year ago

    Yes it is the first time. I’m liking it. I’ve never tried Mastodon as I was never into Twitter and the two seemed similar.

    • Ducks@ducks.dev
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      1 year ago

      I think that Reddit style forums are better suited for the fediverse anyway. Reminds me of the old internet of IRC/Usenet and eventually vBulletin/Xenforo days when I was growing up.

      Twitter and by extension Mastadon I think suffers from smaller communities since the point of those apps is to blast your thoughts and opinions to as many people as possible while Reddit/Lemmy is more for conversation.

  • cryomancer20x6@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Honestly, I had never even heard of the Fediverse before, and I’m extremely active on the internet and opensource projects. It feels insane to me that I had no idea what it was, but now that I understand it - I’m here for good.

  • Nilesse@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I tried Mastodon first but I never really was much of a Twitter user. I find that format in general makes it difficult to find information about specific topics and there’s not as much discussion. I’m liking Lemmy way more because I like the forum style format. It’s certainly interesting watching all the “duplicate” communities across the instances though, I’m hoping it’ll settle down a bit.

  • Platypus@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Just joined today, and definitely first experience. So far, it SEEMS pretty straightforward. Kinda waiting for the gotcha that trips me up.

  • Watcher@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    I created a mastodon account 3-4 years ago but I’ve never used it tbh because I’m not a big Twitter fan. Lemmy has it’s own problems but it’s definitely better than reddit if they are gonna change the API guidelines.

  • FloppySlapper@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    My first experience with the Fediverse was Mastodon, and my second was PeerTube. Having interconnectedness between the different platforms, like Mastodon and Lemmy, is interesting, but also a little confusing with how it all works, so I just use the individual platforms directly instead.

  • JohnDClay@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Yes it’s my first time. I’m a little worried about long term stability of communities and accounts if individuals get tired of hosting servers, but seems like everyone is really nice and invested so far.

  • molave@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    Yes. To put to simple terms, the Reddit refugees moved from “the Reddit” to “a reddit that also interacts with other reddits”. You can consider the whole fediverse as a “superreddit”

  • ninja@hoboninjachicken.com
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    1 year ago

    Lemmy is my first

    I love the idea, I hope it grows in popularity

    I wasn’t aware of that when I first signed up, but a few days in I learned that

  • Evolone@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Yes, it is. And I literally have no idea what I’m doing or what the fediverse is or how to best utilize it and I have a mastodon account but don’t use it because all of this fediverse/instance stuff stresses me out and I just want a cool community to feel like I’m a part of, not a bunch of stuff I don’t understand and I hope I can feel comfortable here with Lemmy. Oof.

    • CosmicSploogeDrizzle@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Imagine there were multiple reddit websites. Reddit.com, reddit.org, reddit.social, etc. Doesn’t matter what account you have, you can see communities/subreddits across anyone of them.

      That’s Lemmy.

      When you make a lemmy account, it’s more like an email address. You are evolone@lemmy.ml, I am cosmicsploogedrizzle@lemmy.ml. Someone else is joeblow@beehaw.org. We can all chat and post and have a good time no matter what website/instance we post to.

      That’s how users work on lemmy. Just like email. Communities on lemmy work the exact same way as users.

      If all you’re interested in is that, then you can stop there and fully enjoy your time with lemmy as a reddit replacement.

      The future potential and complexity comes from the next part:

      The fediverse is someone said, "hey, you know how people on reddit can’t follow people on Twitter, or people on YouTube can’t subscribe to subreddits, or people on Instagram can’t leave YouTube comments? Well let’s make it so you can.

      Now this isn’t perfectly implemented at the moment, and there are a lot of growing pains (it’s kinda like the wild wild West), but you can make a mastodon account (like Twitter), and follow the this lemmy community !asklemmy@lemmy.ml on it, and you’ll see all the posts and all the comments that you would otherwise see on lemmy, just in a twitter-like format.

      It’s not perfect and compatibility across these decentealized apps is not perfectly impremented atm, but in the future you could theoretically have one giant interconnected web where everything from “Twitter” to “reddit” to “YouTube” to “Instagram” to whatever fediverse equivalent app are all interwoven. And if any instance of them gets a big enough head to pull something like reddit is pulling, or what Twitter has been pulling, the community can just make a new “email” on a different instance/website and continue as of nothing changed. No single website/instance can abuse their power, because another instance can be spun up any time.

      • Space_Mettzger@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        I’m not sure I understand the last part correctly. As I understand it, if a community behaves in a way the users don’t like, we can just create a new community. The advantage of the federated nature is that it’s not as painful as finding for example a whole reddit or twitter alternative because of how modular the fediverse is, right?

        Edit: come to think of it, I have a second question and you seem to have this whole thing figured out. I’ve seen people say that they are on lemma as well as kbin to see which they like better ot which one grows better I guess. But does it really matter since the whole thing is interconnected anyways?

        Thanks :-)

        • calculuschild@vlemmy.net
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          1 year ago

          Doesn’t matter what account you have, you can see communities/subreddits across anyone of them.

          I’m having trouble with this part. If I want to look up threads about the latest Pokemon movie, Reddit would let me just type “Pokemon Avengers of Middle Earth” into the search bar, and I would see hundreds of results from all different subreddits that I can comment on right away.

          Lemmy only seems to search my local instance, unless I first

          • search on lemmy.directory
          • manually subscribe to those communities so they show up on my local instance
          • search again on my local instance
          • finally I can comment

          It’s a hassle. I would love if Lemmy included some kind of optional search mode that searches the directory instance, and then has a nice big button to subscribe to the results that are not federated (am I using that right?) with your current instance.

          I understand there are growing pains, but I work in tech and I’m just barely stumbling along here. The “it’s like email” analogy starts to fall apart pretty quickly once you realize Gmail can only send messages to Outlook if you first go to Outlook and copy a special code. For every email address you want to send to. The average user is going to give up.

          Am I misunderstanding how it all works? I’m hoping to learn more. Just figuring out how to comment on this remote thread from my instance took forever, and I don’t necessarily want to be subscribed here, but it seems to be required to make even a single comment. I am probably doing something wrong.