this post was submitted on 14 Jun 2023
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Follow instance rules, be decent human being...

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My introduction to these platforms was through the android app. However I was lurking the last couple days and today the app broke so I decided to go to an instance directly.

I came to realize something was different when I stumbled upon a thread from /195 talking about how they changed their name because 196 on became more popular.

So my first question which I basically just want affirmation for is that every instance can have it's own communities that share the same name. But are other instances of the same community shared in a feed or do I have to search out each one individually?

Secondly usernames. Since I signed up with the same nick on multiple platforms I assume it's like an email system with Kritical@

However, do I have to register to every instance I wish to comment on or as long as they are sharing resources I should be able to post?

Literally my first post so I'm sure I could figure this out on my own but figure asking these questions may help others transitioning with the same questions.

Big fan of the platform. Fuck reddit and fuck /u/spez. This is what I'm looking for in a link aggregator.

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[–] [email protected] 12 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Okay, here goes. I was confused at first, so maybe my explanation will be more relatable than some of the others.

Let's pretend there are three different websites: reddit.com, feddit.com, and seddit.com. Each one has its own subreddits:

reddit.com/r/funny

feddit.com/r/funny

seddit.com/r/funny

These three websites can browse ALL of the other sites' subreddits. On reddit.com you can browse and comment reddit.com/r/funny, feddit.com/r/funny, and seddit.com/r/funny, even though these three subreddits are entirely different from each other and not linked in any way. These subreddits are known as communities. Now it doesn't matter whether you sign up on reddit, feddit, or seddit, since they can all browse ALL of the communities.

Now to expand on that just a tad: reddit, feddit, and seddit will still have their own rules, permissions, and such since they're independent of each other. These distinguishing factors are (as far as I know) the only reason to choose one over another. Maybe server speed and some other factors.

The usernames reflect where you signed up. If I signed up on feddit, my username would be [email protected]

Hope that helps. I've found that once you understand lemmy, the explanations are more complicated than the actual setup itself.