A few weeks ago Lemmy was buggy on computers and there were no good mobile clients out there, now on PC the site is pretty stable and fast, and there are now some pretty good iOS/Android clients too. Thanks to all the people who made this possible!
As someone who has been here for quite some time before the reddit exodus, it is crazy how much this place has improved in such a short time. I used to check lemmy once or maybe twice a day and then I'd go back to reddit. Now with all the new people posting here, lemmy has replaced reddit for me
I joined too early and stopped looking as there was so little content. In fact, when Lemmy started becoming well-known, I forgot I even had an account and made a new one elsewhere. Luckily, my password manager has a better memory!
Now if only my upvotes would go through. Hopefully the patch that was applied to lemmy.world yesterday addresses that. Their instance seems much more stable and responsive now.
Yeah, nearly three years ago when I first saw Lemmy I found the idea so cool but I didn't expect people not interested in fun rust projects to actually come here.
And here we are now with an active platform with a wide variety of users !
Hell yes. Desktop web interface is solid. Jerboa on Android is solid. Now I'm just working on breaking the habit of typing old.reddit.com while waiting for things during the day...
Lemmy is different than Reddit, and that's a good thing. I don't need to replicate Reddit. My problem is just the muscle memory habit of opening a tab and typing in o l d . And hitting enter when it autocompletes
That's cool, but sadly the inbox doesn't work right. You can't upvote or downvote a comment in it, nor can you see the context to figure out what comment of yours they're replying to. Hopefully that's something fixable in the future.
Thanks spez! You sent all the best devs making free programs for your platform to your biggest competitor, plus enough users for it to reach critical mass and allow the snowball effect to grow. And it's FOSS so it can't be stopped!
Developers have been kicking into overdrive to smooth things out. Web UIs are improving in stability under load, and apps like Wefwef are performing great. Each day people participate, donate, bug report, and audit code, is another day that Lemmy improves its rigidity.
And remember that even a Euro per month is enough. It doesn't sound like a lot but if enough people donate just a little, it can grow to a pretty good amount of money.
Especially for the level of changes that have taken place. Lemmy basically had a major rewrite to move away from web sockets, and Lemmy.world's operators are running overtime just trying to fix the site up, and make it work for the massive amount of users that they have, addressing a few of the scaling issues in the processing.
Quite literally by the hour I see app updates come in to pave over issues while at the same time developers are working directly with the big instance owners.
If that's not a labor of love for a platform you care about I don't know what is.
As a very new user, not one too tech savvy either, having constant improvements over the short time I've been here is so refreshing to see! Still getting my head around some of the navigational aspects, but Wefwef has been a blast to use.
I remember when I'd refresh the front page and see posts from the day before. Now it seems like every few hours there's new content. This is a really happening place
It just needs horizontal so that you could throw more servers at an instance and improve performance.
At some point a single community will be so active that one server won't be enough , it's better not to split it just so that it will be easier for the software.
I'd argue the exact opposite. We should strive for more instances and for Lemmy's userbase to be spread around. The fact that is scaling out (more instances) is easier than scaling up (beefier servers) is a feature, not a bug.
It's not exactly something that you can force. If X amount of users want to join an instance Y, the instance should be able to provide capabilities to host those users. Besides, horizontal scaling provides other benefits, stability is the main one - if one server instance goes down, others can immediately pick up the slack.
Lemm.ee has horizontal scaling, and afaik it's the only lemmy instance to have added it. He has a sticky on meta@lemm.ee that talks about how he's using a half dozen different servers to split the load, although there's a few services that can't be split like image caching, so they just get their own server. I think the changes are being pulled into future updates so hopefully other lemmy instances can start doing the same
I'm currently hopping between Liftoff and Connect for my Android client right now, and it's hard to decide. Both are getting regular updates and they're just getting better! The race to improve is very exciting.
Sticking with Connect for the next few days though! Feels very good to use. Lots of customization.
Use it for PC too 😉
Since it's a PWA (Progressive web application) it can be installed (as its own program) on any os with a compatible browser, including Windows, Linux and Mac.
I hope at some point you can join a community on another server and see all posts, not be restricted to what gets posted from now on. Federated is great, but some way to make it transparent would be cool.
Well, I have joined communities on other servers where I am the first to join. At that point, it shows up on my server and others on my server can also see it listed, but posts on my server to that group only get updated from the day I joined forward. That's what I meant.
I think you might be confusing community with instance? If so, then yeah you can't do that nor block a whole instance (as an user) on lemmy. Kbin can do it, but I haven't tested it
I remember when reddit was a bug filled mess but it was the user community that made the site. That is happening here as well. We shall evolve beyond the limitations of reddit.