this post was submitted on 24 Jun 2023
-2 points (43.8% liked)
Self Hosted - Self-hosting your services.
11398 readers
2 users here now
A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
Rules
- No harassment
- crossposts from c/Open Source & c/docker & related may be allowed, depending on context
- Video Promoting is allowed if is within the topic.
- No spamming.
- Stay friendly.
- Follow the lemmy.ml instance rules.
- Tag your post. (Read under)
Important
Beginning of January 1st 2024 this rule WILL be enforced. Posts that are not tagged will be warned and if not fixed within 24h then removed!
- Lemmy doesn't have tags yet, so mark it with [Question], [Help], [Project], [Other], [Promoting] or other you may think is appropriate.
Cross-posting
- [email protected] is allowed!
- [email protected] is allowed!
- [email protected] is allowed!
- [email protected] is allowed if topic has to do with selfhosting.
- [email protected] is allowed!
If you see a rule-breaker please DM the mods!
founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
We have a detailed feature roadmap/prioritization laid out. I only mentioned the two most-critical items that I am seeing as real differentiators between the tools we have reviewed. And we have evaluated quite a few in addition to Lemmy: Discourse was (is?) the front-runner, but also proprietary, paid, non open-source ones like Khoros, Verint, and numerous others.
The challenge is that:
a) My business partners are keen on the Reddit style interface, but it must be a standalone instance and white-labeled.
b) Our business case requires near-infinite sub-reddits, which most of these tools can't provide
c) Our unique user base and business model is the special sauce of our investor pitch, not the tech. In a pinch, any of these tools can work, but we need something that scales in the right way. Replatforming down the road is expensive and impactful to users, whereas spending a bit of time up front to do tool eval is much cheaper. You can't "fail fast" when it comes to significant strategic decisions like this.
d) We don't yet have the funding for a full-spectrum, full-time dev team. We can afford one or two tech people part-time right now, with the assumption that standing up a pilot can be done part-time if the person has done it before. Once we are funded though, we can share fixes/features that we build back into the Lemmy community. That level of control is why I like open source tools over proprietary (where you don't have the ability to modify code or define the roadmap priorities).
Hence we don't want to build our own tool from scratch if Lemmy can check enough of the feature boxes. But I want to pressure test that, as I am concerned greatly about its overall lack of maturity as a platform (as @FleaCatcher also mentions below).