Comment on Bad UX is keeping the majority of people away from Lemmy
frog_brawler@lemmy.world 1 week agoWas your experience different between those 3-4 servers or was it pretty much universally consistent?
Comment on Bad UX is keeping the majority of people away from Lemmy
frog_brawler@lemmy.world 1 week agoWas your experience different between those 3-4 servers or was it pretty much universally consistent?
Steve@communick.news 1 week ago
One didn’t allow down votes. Seemed like a good idea. I rarely down vote. But in practice, when I do it’s for a reason. And I want the option.
Another went down for roughly a week. So that didn’t work out.
Which is one reason I embraced Communick; a paid instance. Been here since.
imaqtpie@lemmy.myserv.one 1 week ago
Communick is a nice option. I have an account there too. Unfortunately many Lemmings are weirdly hostile to it being a paid service, so it hasn’t gotten much traction.
I think having more small business type Lemmy servers would be a decent solution to the onboarding difficulties people are discussing in this thread. There’s definitely a chunk of users who just need the security of having someone to contact if they are confused about something or something isn’t working. And if they’re paying for it then the provider has an incentive to give them customer support.
3dmvr@lemm.ee 1 week ago
Like I genuinely hope you dont pay that much littlecreek (im same dude as other comment) has a 3.50 deal for 4 core 4gb ram on lowendtalk, more than enough to run lemmy for yourself
Dil@is.hardlywork.ing 1 week ago
I pay 7$ monthly for 8 core 16gb ram littlecreek, yunohost for free, installed lemmy on it, works solid, use like 10% of the resources with friendica also on the server lol That site looks insanely expensive monthly.
imaqtpie@lemmy.myserv.one 1 week ago
First of all, 99% of people don’t have the technical expertise to self host Lemmy, and that’s who we are talking about in this thread.
Secondly, there are very significant benefits to using a well established server versus self hosting. The most obvious perk is having a built-in community to interact with and learn from.
But more importantly, more established servers will already be subscribed to many of the major communities, making the task of finding and browsing remote communities that much easier. Consider this:
Your local version of c/science_memes only has ~200 posts and 1.2k comments. Also, many of the older posts didn’t seem to federate the comments or upvotes. This is because your server only recently subscribed to that community, and federation doesn’t occur retroactively.
The sh.itjust.works version of the community has 3.9k posts and 94k comments, because we have been subscribed since the community started.
The main version actually has 3.92k posts and 99.6k comments. Most of the missing comments on the SJW version are likely from lemmygrad and hexbear users, who are defederated by SJW but not by mander.xyz. This is also another major consideration about self hosting vs. joining a larger server: defederations. Some people will see predetermined defederations as a pro while others will consider it a con (also depending on which servers are defederated). The main thing is that people have options that work for them.
Funnily enough, the communick version is majorly fucked up, not sure why that is.
At this point I’m just getting curious, so I checked the lemmy.myserv.one version as well, and it’s got an impressive 3.84k posts and 98.2k comments.
Might as well try it for c/greentext as well.
So yeah, it’s not quite as simple as you make it seem. Hopefully someday Lemmy will integrate the ability to federate communities retroactively as some kind of option. Because I think that was more of a design choice than anything, technically it should be possible to toggle a setting and get your instance to download all of the posts and comments from a remote community, even from before you subscribed.
And I feel like without having access to all of the old posts and comments that we have built up over the past couple years, content on Lemmy probably feels a lot more sparse for a new user. Personally, I have always enjoyed sorting by top posts of all time in various communities, both on reddit and now on Lemmy. Even if you’ve been subscribed to the community the whole time, you tend to miss out on some great posts if you only ever sort by new or hot.
@3dmvr@lemm.ee
And btw, I luckily have a free lifetime subscription to the communick Lemmy server because they did a promotion back in the day.