this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2023
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Asklemmy
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Here's my opinion on a few I've tried:
Kbin: I liked the UI but I thought calling communities "magazines" was weird. Also, there were features that I felt unnecessary like "boost" or "microblog". Self-hosting documentation was much worse compared to Lemmy.
Squabbles: It took me a while to figure out the UI and honestly did not like it. The icon looks very funny as if it's mocking what the average user is supposed to look like. It also isn't decentralized.
Tildes: I liked the UI and the name. Not much to say other than that it's also not decentralized.
Discuit: The best UI out of the bunch. It's very easy to navigate. I wish it also had a naming community prefix like "!" or "m/" or "s/" or "~". Generally, it feels very Reddit-like but it's also not decentralized.
Lemmy: Very rough start but this and Kbin were really the only real options for me because they're both decentralized. It's gotten a lot better over the past month in terms of performance and UI. There's a lot of apps being developed for it too. Most of Lemmy's annoying quirks are its bugs but those are being fixed after every new release.
Tildes is a non-starter because I'm not cool enough to know anyone to provide an invite.
Just email the dev and ask. That's what I did.
Same. I firmly think if Tildes had opened up more, it would have risen fast as a viable reddit alternative. That ship has likely sailed, but it's aiight cus it's still got great communities.
They didn't have any interest in becoming a Reddit alternative, at least not for the vast majority of Reddit content like memes and puppy pictures. I think the entire place is text only, which does tend to foster more thoughtful commentary.