this post was submitted on 15 Jun 2023
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Ignore 'smaller userbase' if you prefer it that way. We're talking about it as a platform, in its UI, functionalities, etc.

I go first: You can post images in the text body with a simple Ctrl+V. No need to upload it somewhere or even save to your device.

So, in your opinion, in what Lemmy is better than Reddit already?

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[–] Lonnie123 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I personally like the decentralization aspect of it.

This is kind of its biggest strength and its biggest weakness. I'm just now learning the ropes, but I'm probably in the upper 10% of the population for tech literacy and even I was scratching my head about "instances" vs "communities" ... And there is lemmy.world and lemmy.one and lemmy.ml and lemmy.inifity and it looked like I needed a separate account on all of them initially but now maybe it looks like I dont? And do they share communities or is there a tech "sublemmy" on all of them and I should subscribe to all of them?? I think I've figured out how to subscribe to multiple instances communities on a single account... But this is asking ALOT more than 90% of the population is going to do.

Kind of like if there was reddit1.com, reddit2.com, reddit3.com, etc... And they all had similar communities but not really and you needed an account on all of them, etc...

Im still not 100% sure, but as a "go to the website and browse" type experience reddit is still the reigning champ, and I dont see anything lemmy can do to "fix" the issue of fractured communities and website because it doesnt consider that a bug but a feature.

[–] KermitLeFrog 0 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Yeah I work in computer science and one of my bandmates works in cybersecurity, so both of us are at least top 1% computer literacy if not higher. And we were just talking earlier today about how ridiculous the barrier of entry is to using this site. I'm pretty much only here because I'm fucking insane and no barrier of entry is too high to stop me from climbing over AND it was easier for me to figure out anyway due to me being naturally inclined to this kind of thing.

[–] spirals 4 points 1 year ago

Idk I am not smart and only took 1 year of computer science but I caught on pretty quickly. The instances vs community thing was easy to comprehend. The only thing that confused me was how Mastodon, lemmy, and kbin interact. I thought I needed a separate account for kbin but turns out I don't, for the most part at least. I'm not interested in Twitter so I haven't looked into Mastodon, but it's probably the same.

[–] linearchaos 3 points 1 year ago

I honestly don't think it's as bad as everyone's making it out. It's different, and that's the whole of the problem. It's not a monolithic replacement for Reddit. It can totally replace Reddit, but it's not Reddit 2.0.

You join and small or medium sized server and search for the communities you want. If you pop onto a node what's a decent number of people and don't see a lot of shady shit happening, You're probably in a good place to settle down.

Reddit is like going to Walmart. You want car tires, a pack of frozen burritos, a pair of socks you just run around to the store and buy whatever you want, but you're also at the mercy of what they want to sell you.

Lemmy It's like running around to a bunch of small to medium sized convenience stores, If one place doesn't treat you right there are hundreds or thousands of others that have no such hangups.

Going from Lemmy server to Lemmy server needs to be a little more transparent, and group subscription to similar communities across different servers needs to be a thing.

I've had no problems discovering communities off server. In a few cases I've joined like communities on more than one server subscribe to them and I just get all the posts.

In the end, I think all the small communities will get gobbled up by the larger ones.

My favorite part of Lemmy is that no one person or even groups of people can ruin things for everyone. If you don't like how things are you can go to another place where you do or you can make your own place.