Holy shit. Wefwef is so fucking good
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Credits
Our icon(masterpiece) was made by @clen15!
It's honestly the best progressive web app I've ever used.
It feels almost native. I hope they eventually make it native. But even if not I’ll keep using just cuz it’s the best we’ve got.
Try Memmy, its on TestFlight
what is a progressive web app? Is it like a pseudo-app built into a browser like Safari?
A PWA is an app that's built on web platform technologies and use the browser engine to emulate a native platform app that uses platform specific technologies (Android, iOS). Since they use the browser to serve functionality, they can be presented on any operating system, and the browser UI is supplanted by the app UI. It can still be deeply integrated into the device, so you can install it to your phone, you get the icon, they can access functions of the device, like notifications, running in the background, running offline even in some use cases. Just instead of the device OS providing the backend, the browser functions as the backend. It's basically a website wrapper, though I hesitate to call it that for fear of being reductive.
Also add Sub Rehab to the 'jumpstart your subscription'. Has a bunch of subreddits and a way to submit linked subreddits/communities
Is it me or kbin just doesn't federate properly? Its always lacking comments on many posts.
I can't get kbin to federate at all to my Lemmy server. Other Lemmys work fine.
I urge everyone to support a community you like by posting interesting topics and commenting, and the rest will follow. Don't just wait for people to do it.
I’ve been using wefwef for a bit and just installed memmy. IMHO wefwef has the potential to be great. Memmy is great already - super polished.
There's a map of subredits and their new homes, seb.rehab. Many are official others are just copies. You can filter the list to just lemmy communities and kbin magazine.
wefwef is such a life saver. It literally feels like Apollo.
Thank you for this, one part I'm still struggling with and would appreciate help...
How do I subscribe to a community that is on another instance and have it show up on my account? Example - I have an account here at lemmy.world, but there's https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/c/piracy community and I'd love to see their posts in one place on my lemmy.world account. How do I do this? If I navigate to that link, it asks me to create a lemmy.dbzer0 account to subscribe so i dont think i'm following the correct pathway
eta - nevermind i figured it out. going to leave my comment here for others though
so what you have to do is search for that community on your own instance and then select it and subscribe that way. Can't follow the link directly to the instance, but rather have to search using lemmy.world's search and follow the link from there. So for instance: https://lemmy.world/c/[email protected]
(if there's a more straightforward way, i'd still appreciate tips)
You got it right, if you want to use your lemmy.world account, you gotta browse through lemmy.world.
Going to https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/c/piracy you would need a lemmy.dbzer0.com account.
You can also link to another community on another instance with this syntax: [email protected]
thanks, glad those sort of autopopulate once you start typing ! and then the community name. Would probably screw it up if it didnt haha
Might be a stupid question, but I iust signed up for lemmy.world today and wanted to add some communities from the migration list here. The equivalent of r/anarchychess is listed as https://sopuli.xyz/c/anarchychess and on my first visit to that site I couldn't really figure out how to subscribe... in this case sopuli would be the hosting instance if I understand. Do I need a sopuli account to subscribe and just add that account to my lemmy app? Or did I just not find the right option?
Use the web interface and search for either:
Or
The full url like you linked it.
Be patient, if it's a community that's new to your server it may take a couple minutes to find it.
I say to use the web interface because all the apps are rather immature and inconsistent in their handling of this.
The best way to link communities is like this:
You should be able to click that :)
You can also just do a search for it and it should pop up.
I don't think you can link communities like that ? Or maybe it's only supported in some clients / instances. My understanding is that you need to link them by using the usual markdown link syntax (or the link button below the editor) and input /c/[email protected] as the link target.
Like this:
[anarchychess](/c/[email protected])
Which will render like this:
Note however that I've had some problems with this previously. I suspect that the first time someone tries to access a remote community from whatever instance you're on, your instance runs some heavy API queries which are prone to failure if either instance is under heavy load.
Your instance is pretty outdated. Most have updated to 0.18, while you're still on 0.17.3
In 0.18 you can just type !community@instance and it will automatically link it and keep you on your own instance
Noob here too.
I don't think you need another account on the separate instance as long as it's federated to lemmy.world
I think you need to subscribe to the following
https://lemmy.world/c/[email protected]
source of my info https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/2212
I've only just signed up for Lemmy myself, but it looks like you can access federated communites with URLs like https://lemmy.world/c/[email protected]
There's probably a more ergonomic way to get there than manually constructing the URL though!
Search for !community@server or the original url.
It would also probably help if everyone starts taking interesting links and content from Reddit and posting it to Lemmy. It's an easy way to boost Lemmy's content.
i can't figure out how to subscribe to communities that are outside of my instance? i keep trying to do the thing where you append it to the url or search for it but it's not working..
I'm still having a bit of trouble using Lemmy. I have Jerboa on my phone but I can't use it right now, it says something about a version lower than v0.18 and trying a different instance and I can't log-in on my phone's browser because the circle just keeps spinning. I'm on my laptop and I feel like if I log this out, I'm gonna have troubles logging in again.
People need to stop recommending lemmy.world when it has so many people already; join lemm.ee, vlemmy.net, or lemmy.one instead.
Or see if there's an instance for your local community. For example I'm Dutch, so I joined feddit.nl. This makes filtering by Local (as opposed to Subscribed or All) actually usefully to see what's new on communities on the instance.
ELI5: What does “pick an instance” mean? What would I be deciding on?
OP here: IMO choosing an instance is mostly a big decision about nothing. What I mean is its an annoying barrier of a decision you gotta make to play that’s both cheap to change AND probably will have very little impact on your experience.
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In two weeks you probably won’t care which instance you picked. 90% of instances are going to be relatively generic: same posts, same communities, same federation.
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If for some reason you do regret your first pick in a couple weeks, you’ll know, and you probably won’t feel like its a big deal to switch. There’s no karma, and losing your account’s link to a couple weeks of post/comment history is, at least to me, a little 🤷♀️.
My advice would be: pick any semi generic instance to start (e.g. lemmy.world), and if you’re curious about more curated instances (there’s a lot less of these, most notable is beehaw.org) make an account on them a few days later just to check out the vibe.
The only wrong decision is to waffle lol.
It would probably be a good idea not to keep recommending lemmy.world as the default instance at this point, given how much larger it has become compared to other instances.
Lemm.ee is a much better recommendation. The server is stable, well-run, and has a lot of room for large growth.
If I want to switch to say, Beehaw, would I need a different username? Also, I just looked at the Politics community on Beehaw, and it’s different than the Politics community on LemmyWorld. Shouldn’t they be the same?
Is there a short video introduction for first timers looking to join? Trying to explain this to a friend is difficult, much easier to just send a video to them.
Short version:
lemmy: some sort of opensource type of Reddit
instances: can also be called servers, anyone can host a lemmy code.
community: synonym for subreddit
federation: instances can federate (connect) to each other and their users can interact with the connected instances, they can also defederate (disconnect).