I’ve had no issues on Mastodon.World and the advance features are essentially tweetdeck.
LittleLordLimerick@lemm.ee 1 year ago
It won’t last unless Mastadon gets some serious improvements. It’s buggy, glitchy, feature-poor, and confusing to use. There’s no way in its current state it’s going to compete with the big guys for the average person’s attention.
YoBuckStopsHere@lemmy.world 1 year ago
CosmicCleric@lemmy.world 1 year ago
It’s buggy, glitchy
I haven’t seen any glitches or bugs for quite a while.
Which ones are you speaking of?
rob_t_firefly@lemmy.world 1 year ago
From a user-experience standpoint I’m intrigued by the idea of someone who is comfortable using Lemmy finding Mastodon confusing to use. From a technical view it’s literally the same stuff (ActivityPub + a distributed network) fueling the same general concept (federated social media) just with a different interface on top (Twitter/Tweetdeck-flavored instead of Reddit-flavored.)
It’s all just decentralized online community organized by interest; a /c/ here is a hashtag on Mastodon. If you have already come to terms with instances and federation and such in order to use one, what about the other still confuses?
GamingChairModel@lemmy.world 1 year ago
“Just the interface” is a big deal.
Reddit is the same backend as the Reddit I was using through a third party app a few months ago, but the user experience is significantly worse for me, because the interface I’m accessing the service through adds friction to how I use the service and steers me towards how I don’t use the service. Same with accessing email through a web interface versus Outlook versus Thunderbird versus Alpine versus the iOS Mail app.
Lemmy is how I want to interact with user-generated text and comments. Mastodon’s interface is not. I don’t care that it happens to be ActivityPub on the backend, because the interface drives how I consume and interact with the content.