I barely use reddit anymore save for porn and niche subs but after that glorious app I had used for ages finally died a few days ago I felt devastated. it was like losing an old friend. I hope reddit dies an even slower and more painful death
I barely use reddit anymore save for porn and niche subs but after that glorious app I had used for ages finally died a few days ago I felt devastated. it was like losing an old friend. I hope reddit dies an even slower and more painful death
Fediverse New User Orientation
Reddit Migration
Here from reddit? Find your new home.
Fediverse
The “network” of instances that uses ActivityPub
Lemmy
The Reddit-like federated forum app that runs on ActivityPub within the Fediverse
Instance Lists
Lists of Instances
Communities
Communities for getting started in the fediverse
For instance Admins
Tools and info for admins and admins-to-be
For Devs
Building or contributing?
The Fediverse Could be Awesome (If We Don’t Screw it Up)
I’m sure this “welcome kit” is meant as a helpful thing but I have to wonder if it is exactly the problem that prevents Lemmy from being adopted.
When someone joins Reddit, they don’t need to read a literal plethora of guides on how to use Reddit. It’s obvious.
What looks like a helpful thing to do is instead going to intimidate and confuse new people.
So ultimately the question is: why isn’t Lemmy obvious to use, and how do we make it so?
Reddit wasn’t easy to understand either when I joined 13 years ago. I guess discovery is part of the fun.
Thing it though, you don’t really need to read any of it.
The experience is pretty similar for the end user. However the guide is very useful if you want to get to the back end stuff.
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