[-] Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev 6 points 1 year ago

Hey! Considering I just advertised your server on Reddit, thought I might put this here. Feel free to delete if you don't need/want it.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev to c/main@sh.itjust.works

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/post/61827

With the ongoing large influx, I was thinking that it might be nice to have some instructions for new users pinned across instances' front pages, not only to be more welcoming and help with the learning curve, but also to maybe direct people to less popular instances. Something like this post, but more detailed. I wrote a draft below—any thoughts on the idea or the instructions?

How to Join Lemmy and Find and Subscribe to Communities

(These instructions are for using Lemmy in a browser. If you are using an app, some steps may differ.)

How to Join Lemmy

To use Lemmy, you need to be a member of one instance from the list at https://join-lemmy.org/instances. You will still be able to see content from anywhere, but the instance you choose will determine:

  • What URL you use to log in to Lemmy,
  • What content shows on the homepage when you select "Local" or "All",
  • Who moderates your instance, and
  • What rules you agree to when you sign up.

Choose an instance that matches your interests, language, and region. (If you want more information about an instance, you can tap its "Join" button, which will show you its current homepage in the main view and its description in the sidebar.) Please avoid joining instances that are already crowded.

Once you have decided on an instance, tap its "Join" button to open it and then tap "Sign Up" in the upper-right corner. Fill out the form and wait for your account to be approved.

When your account is approved, log in and customize your profile and settings. If you change your language settings, select "Undetermined" in addition to any languages you speak so that you can still see posts and comments that are not tagged as being in any particular language.

How to Find and Subscribe to Communities

There are two ways to find communities through Lemmy:

  1. To browse communities that others in your instance are already subscribed to, tap the "Communities" tab at the top of the page and choose the "All" scope. Tapping on a community name will open it through your instance.

  2. To browse communities across all instances, visit https://browse.feddit.de/. Tapping on the community's name will open it, but probably not through your instance (in which case the page will say that you are not logged in). Instead, follow these steps:

    a. Copy the community's URL. You can either use the copy button next to the community name or else open the community outside your instance and copy the URL from your address bar.

    b. In your instance, tap on the "🔍 Search" button in the upper toolbar.

    c. Make sure that you have chosen "All" for each of the four filters: "Type", "Scope", "Community", and "Creator".

    d. Paste the community's URL into the search field and tap "Search".

    e. One of the results should be the community shown as an icon, a name, and a subscriber count. If you do not see it, or it is buried too deep in the search results, try changing "Scope" to "Local". If that does not work, you may need to wait a bit and try again.

    f. Tap on the community in the search results to open it in your instance.

Once a community is open in your instance, subscribe to it by tapping on the "Subscribe" button at the top of the sidebar.

Can't find a community you're looking for? Subscribe to !findacommunity@lemmy.ml and make a post about what you're looking for. Or, if it doesn't exist yet, and your instance allows it, create the community yourself.

[-] Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev 34 points 1 year ago

It's not allowed in a lot of instances because the moderation is absolutely exhausting and sometimes NSFL material.

The only limiting factor here is admins + moderators of an instance willing to put themselves through that.

[-] Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev 8 points 1 year ago

Legitimately almost made my spill my beer xD

Yeah, AAA titles have been absolute trash in recent years. I've just been on indie games and a total simp for Paradox Interactive (sorry, I love grand strategy games) for quite a while now.

[-] Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev 7 points 1 year ago

It's not a priority for the devs, for very understandable reasons. They just finished a HUGE performance pull into the github for lemmy-ui (the web platform). Anybody willing to make a new app or improve the existing one is absolutely welcome to do so.

[-] Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev 12 points 1 year ago

You're awesome man! This is direly needed. I'm just wondering how on earth to publicize this before the madness that hits on Monday.

Any chance you could find a place to fit this in the join lemmy site and do a pull request before then? I know it's a lot to ask, but it would be huge.

4

Over 150,000 teachers in Romania have been striking for higher wages since May 22nd. With the Bacalaureat (the final exam of high school) approaching, the government caves and gives them their demanded 4,000 Lei/Month (862 USD/Month)

[-] Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev 8 points 1 year ago

I'll put up a github issue for it, maybe somebody can look at that

63

Hi all!

So, I'm assuming everyone has seen links like https://beehaw.org/c/news and clicked through to find it doesn't work right because it's a different site (I'm assuming a different instance here).

Well, I just stumbled across an interesting feature: if you enter a link in the following format, it works for everyone regardless of instance of origin:

[News](/c/news@beehaw.org)

News

[My User](/u/barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev)

My User

You're welcome!

[-] Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev 7 points 1 year ago

Do you mean at the technical level or UI level?

At the UI level, just have a look at https://kbin.social and you'll see a lot of very familiar posts. Also their posts show up here, just like any normal post.

Mastodon is a bit trickier. If you put hashtags in your post text, I think it shows up like a "toot" for users following it? Sorry, not a Mastodon user, don't really know how it works.

At a technical level, Lemmy is built on the ActivityPub protocol. It's how Lemmy servers talk to eachother, it's how Mastodon servers talk to eachother, and it's how a hell of a lot more services talk. Best analogy I've heard is ActivityPub is like the email protocol for social media platforms.

[-] Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev 27 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

All of the more fediverse-focused ones (fedditors, fedinauts, feddies, fedizens, etc) are definitely better. Lemmy is bigger than just Lemmy: we have users from Mastodon, Kbin and more seeing and replying to our posts. Let's choose a name that reflects that :)

Also, just to prove a point, if you're here from anywhere not Lemmy, say hello!

[-] Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev 8 points 1 year ago

Nope, none at all. A signed off user is one that's not causing server load :P

[-] Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev 19 points 1 year ago

I hear you man. I went from active contributor to mostly lurking on Reddit, and it wasn't even a conscious choice. Gradually, everything became very mechanistic. I knew what the top few comments would be before going to the comments. The churn became cyclic in nature.

After just a few days here, it was actually a little disconcerting how antagonistic and hostile people there are in the comments section. That's just how people communicate, on a hair-trigger from flamewar.

I recognize your username, I saw what you wrote about SQL scaling. Can you imagine recognizing a username in a major subreddit in the reddit of today?

The dichotomy between the big communities which people subscribe to from all over Lemmy and the small meta/announcement/server issue communities for each individual instance is gonna be interesting to see develop as the userbase increases. Kinda like the difference between seeing people from your street everyday, then many more less familiar people in the city center.

[-] Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev 10 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

It's an open issue on their github. The main devs are way too busy to deal with it. I'm trying to grok as much Rust & Psql knowledge as I can to be able to contribute, but it'll take a while. Anybody with Rust & Psql knowledge can contribute, the devs are open to any contribution to improve the platform

[-] Barbarian@lemmy.reckless.dev 9 points 1 year ago

That's because they're different things in the fediverse.

Lemmy upvotes are mapped to ActivityPub upvotes

Kbin upvotes are mapped to ActivityPub boosts (basically a retweet in twitter language)

This also means that Kbin users have to be much more careful with what they "upvote" as that causes the post/comment to be shown to everyone that follows them in the wider fediverse. They are looking to change this if I recall correctly, and there's a lot of communication between the devs of Lemmy and Kbin on how to approach both this issue, and unifying their API system so apps can work for both.

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Barbarian

joined 1 year ago