this post was submitted on 31 May 2023
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Beehaw Support

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Support and meta community for Beehaw. Ask your questions about the community, technical issues, and other such things here.

A brief FAQ for lurkers and new users can be found here.

Our July 2023 financial update is here.

For a refresher on our philosophy, see also What is Beehaw?, The spirit of the rules, and Beehaw is a Community


This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.

founded 2 years ago
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to start: after some consideration, we've altered our entry question a little bit so that entry is not guaranteed. during the daytime you can basically expect waits of 30 minutes or less when it comes to approval/disapproval, but overnight it'll be anywhere from 6-12 hours. just FYI

if you'd like to introduce yourself without it getting lost in all the posts already made, i just made a thread for that over here

our sidebar should give you most of the information you're looking for about us, but to reiterate some: we are pretty relaxed here, but we have a well carved out understanding of what we want to be. if you would like more elaboration on that, you can find elaboration on that at length in the following two posts:

for some less lengthy and more relaxed elaboration, see the discussion in the comments of this post.

as for funding: we are 100% user-funded. if you would like to contribute to our ability to keep the website up, you can donate on OpenCollective, which supports both one-time donations or monthly donations.

a few other questions occasionally pop up like "why do we have the set of communities we do?" and "why can't people make their own?" (the latter is a feature of lemmy). for elaboration on that, you can see the following post and the discussions here. we are open to suggestions and creating communities as demand sees fit; see also discussion here.

downvotes are disabled on this instance and that's a thing we're not liable to change. if you'd like elaboration for why that is, see this comment. this may be a point of friction for some coming from reddit, but i hope you'll understand why we're doing it even if you don't necessarily agree with it.

if you're interested in our governance to this point and a brief idea of our long term goals, see the comment here.

feel free to sound off on other questions you have; i'll try to update the OP with those and our ability to answer them as time goes on.

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Thanks for the warm welcome, I'm happy to see somewhere new besides Reddit (Yet another Reddit refugee, natch). New to federated type content, and I was initially thrown off by the multiple server style, rather than the central system Reddit employs, so this is going to be a learning experience. Please forgive any faux pas on my part while I get acquainted ^_^

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

An easy way to think about federation is similar to email

When you set up an account on a centralised service, your username is simply "duskyheaps" as you only go to the one site.

With federation, you have a collection of servers and you create an account on one instance and so you become "[email protected]".

You could create an account on lemmy.ml and that would be "[email protected]".

Once you account for this, you'll find it easier to find people or communities on other servers. Off the top of my head and this maybe incorrect but it would be something like "beehaw.org/[email protected]" (I'll come back and edit this to correct it)

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

edit 2: Before anyone gets confused by this comment, here is some solution. The examples here are how a web browser displays the URL in the address field. For a link to work in the federation, the browser must be made to assume we want to link to another webpage within the same domain (that is, the server we are logged on to). This is done by omitting the domain from a HTML referance. Of course. It's W3C standard. See this post which clarified it: https://lemmy.ml/post/1168136.
... unfortunately, links to federated posts and comments are still broken because posts synced to other instances get a different ID than the original.
end edit 2

original comment:
"beehaw.org/c/[email protected]" -- example: beehaw.org/c/[email protected]
or lemmy-specific syntax that will bring up a list of communities known to your instance as you type, and choosing from there will make it a link: "[email protected]" -- example: [email protected]
... unfortunately, this dosnt work for lnks

edit: seems that i just uncovered a ~~bug~~ systemic inconvenience, because the link that is generated leads you directly to that instance's webserver ... which we don't want if this is posted on our home instance (because the link should actually enable us to post on that remote instance). otoh, if we are viewing this from a third instance, then a link "instance2.org/c/[email protected]" would likely not work at all. (right?)
check: beehaw.org/sopuli.xyz/c/[email protected] -- nope!
check: /c/[email protected] -- yep!