Since it seems to be a common question for many new users.
Make a tiktok dance explaining it, that’ll teach the young’uns, at least
More effective would just be making the site easier to use for newcomers, particularly tackling the onboarding and community discoverability.
Some straightforward ways I can think of would be apps assigning users randomly to a good general instance (like lemm.ee, vlemmy.net, or lemmy.one) that isn’t extremely overloaded when registering
and integrating lemmyverse.net’s functionality into lemmy itself, cuz not being able to see a list of all communities and their true member count/activity in Lemmy itself is a huge blow to user experience.
I wouldn’t go as far as automatically assigning users to (random) instances, as some people might really want to use the one they’ve selected for a number of reasons. OTOH, the registration page could offer alternatives (“instead of registering here how about one of these instances, that is currently looking for more users and will have lower loads/latency”, etc.). The default could lead people to some other instance, but always with the option to stay where you are. Of course it would only suggest instances that are federated with the one you’re trying to join (if the admins removed the others there was a reason for that…) or even having admins fill in a list of “preferred instances” that could have a higher priority in the suggestions list?
They’d of course be able to select instances, I just meant having a random good one selected by default when registering.
By good I mean one that’s not too massive, isn’t defederating popular instances, and isn’t a questionable one that’s likely to be defederated itself.
And I don’t think they should explain too much, new users are easily scared away.
Indeed. The more frictionless it is, the better! Even giving the impression of some complexity will drive people away.
Think of instances (lemmy.world, kbin.social, sh.itjust.works, etc.) like planets. Each planet contains cities (or
subredditscommunities). Most of these planets are federated meaning that if you were born on one planet (have a login) then you can travel and participate the galaxy of cities and planets. If a planet defederates, then you can no longer travel there if you were not from there.What is the major difference between something like Lemmy vs Kbin, etc., compared to just two different Lemmy “planets”?
Also, how do other platforms in the fediverse fit into this analogy? Something like Mastodon, would that be considered another galaxy? Is there any travel between these or do they require the birth of a new fedinaut within that galaxy to interact with those worlds?
Mastadon is like a galaxy of federated planets that can speak/travel to Lemmy planets when they want to, but lemmy can’t really understand anything they say to each other and can’t really travel to their planets (mastadon is ‘people’ based like twitter, whereas lemmy is ‘subject’ based like reddit)
I dont know how kbin fits into this analogy. I think it basically is the same as lemmy and can talk/travel to lemmy but also only understands some mastadon
What if they defederate so my visa expires and now I am stuck in the spaceport limbo?
Can you decide to change your “home” planet?
Sign up for a new account at a different instance. While you can transfer your account to another instance in Mastodon, you can’t do it for Lemmy right now.
The best you can do right now is recreate it on another planet. Hopefully someday there will be a way to migrate (or a way to export/import).
What is the difference between the All view and the Local view?
If I understand correctly, local only shows your planet and you can participate fully.
All shows the entire galactic federation (though you may only get to sightsee other planets, but not talk to the locals without getting a visa (login credentials for that planet))
Local view only shows posts hosted on this instance (planet). So only communities hosted on lemmy.world for example.
All view would include posts from other instances as well.
So should I have accounts on more than one instance? Which instance has the most communities?
No, where did you get that idea? If you want to view as much random content from everywhere as you can just browse by All. If you want a more curated experience, stick to your subscriptions. Local is sort of a weird limbo unless you’re on an instance that has a dedicated topic (like the Star Trek instance, for example).
Ok got it.
One interesting thing I found is I have a reddthat.com account and also a lemmy.world account. Using Jerboa, somehow browsing with the reddthat.com account is faster than using the lemmy.world account even if I’m browsing lemmy.world communities.
Local shows posts posted on your planet, All shows the entire federation (galaxy).
Lemmy try
🏅here’s some gold. Get out. 🤣
How exactly is a rainbow made?
How exactly does the sun set?
How exactly does the posi-trac rear end on a Plymouth work?
It just does.
already done. My instance has pinned an infographic explaining how it works and many others have done similar things
Link?
I found it but not where i thought it was