The Lemmy user base passed 150,000 in total users.
😄👋🥂🌱
I really hope the momentum holds and the numbers will continue to grow!
I’m really excited to be here, Lemmy feels like reddit in the golden years (long gone).
agreed, I have found that interacting with content here has been more meaningful and the interactions to be more welcoming. Happy weekend to you!
Happy weekend back to you mate
I have 2 weeks off whoop!
Congrats!
I completely agree! And I don’t think we’ve really started to see people leave reddit yet, that’ll happen when the 3PAs stop working
Oh true! Once reddit floods with sewage from bot posts and mods can’t deal, lemmy is going to flood with users!
Agreed. So much less noise.
Have to agree, I don’t really mind how many total users or active users there are at this point, there’s enough talk to engage in proper conversations now
Yup finally seeing a lot of good conversations now. Which was really always the best part of Reddit.
I do expect that it will taper off eventually and then drop for a bit before leveling out (not being pessimistic, it’s just a simple fact that much of the current growth of Lemmy, or for that matter kbin or other reddit alternatives, is due to people leaving reddit, and eventually everyone that wants to leave who is willing to consider this place will have come over, so the growth will stop or at least revert to a more “normal” pace, and not everyone will end up liking Lemmy, and so there will be some fraction of people that don’t stay long once the hype over people moving from reddit has died down). However, it should still stabilize somewhere much higher than things were before the migration, so my hope is that it gets enough momentum that the number of people that remain when this incident is over is enough to sustain a functional community.
Realistic assessment but the way reddit’s ceo is going ,I think we will see more exodus 1st july and again shortly after that, I do think reddits bad news train has only just left the station.
Lemmy gives me that new frontier feeling. Win 98SE times was the last time i felt it.
I’m getting that feeling too.
What part of 98SE made you feel like it was that much different from 95, outside of being slightly less buggy?
Not OP, but when they pivoted and included the web into the core of the OS. It was like, wait, what??
Neat, anyone else having problems upvoting anything? I try but it just goes right back down.
From my experience it’s just not showing on your end but after a while it updates the votes
yeah, just a little buggy sometimes
Sometimes the site goes a little buggy. Sometimes i get 503 but i just wait, refresh, or i heard someone say too they have lemmy and kbin account and use the other when one is down xD I think it’s still adjusting to having so many users
Same
Haven’t experienced any real bugs yet on here, but 90% of the time when a website is not working as expected for me, switching to firefox fixes it.
Hurray 🎉👏🎊🎈🙌🍾🥂🪅🥳🍻
Are we allowing emojis here? If so just another reason for people to flee Reddit
Are we allowing emojis here?
You need permission to use emojis? 🤔
Oh, you mean in the sense that “emojis = downvotes” on Reddit. I still used them on Reddit anyway. 🤷♂️
BTW: you can use : shorthand for emojis, in case you didn’t know. 👍
In my opinion emojis are great for casual discussions and they convey a little playfulness.
For more serious topics they might be a little inappropriate or appear out of place for some people.
I 💜 emojis. Watch Reddit burn. 🍿 Slava Ukraini 🇺🇦
I 🥰 emojis.
Grow 🌱🪴 up ☝️👆
Edit: jk I misinterpreted I thought you were raging about them lmfao
I need to grow up
I don’t care much about the emoji option, but the ability to add an image to a reply without having to do it manually through imgur etc is something I’ve wanted for years!
🇯🇵🦆🐣👩💀🙄️😊🦭😕💀
I’m pro emoji 😄👍👍👾🎉
👁️🫦👁️
Lemmy is far less mature than reddit but at least its still improving and growing
The most important is to keep up the momentum. Users don’t mean anything if there’s no content. We all need to keep posting stuff and keep actively disucsing stuff!
I would argue that depends entirely in which context you use the word “mature” haha.
To be honest, the fact that such immature software is capable of being a viable alternative to one of the biggest websites on the internet is already super impressive.
Let’s see where we will head in a couple of years.
Damn right. I’ve been using Reddit for years, and after this shitshow I moved to Lemmy and honestly, it doesn’t feel that much different. I don’t make content, nor do I moderate, so I just scroll and lurk, and comment sometimes, and Lemmy has a steep, extremely short learning curve (you can call it simply a barrier to entry), but after understanding very few basic concepts, this shit feels as natural as Reddit. Besides, I’m testing the Memmy app for iOS and it’s improving exponentially. I seriously feel like Lemmy can become a good alternative, for real, not for the memes.
That’s what I love about it, though. The fact that it is still maturing means that we as a community have a say on how Lemmy will evolve.
Lemmy has a lot of obstacles that will prevent it from truly going mainstream:
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The community browser is complete dog shit for discovering content on different instances, and trying to view another instance’s content from your own community is just needlessly complex. Discoverability is still a lot better than Mastodon though, where you’d look at all post and see nothing but hentai reposting bots regurgitating stuff that isn’t even allowed on NSFWLemmy…
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Due to the nature of federation, you also run the risk of committing to an instance only for them to defederate entirely, or disassociate from content you want to see but they don’t agree with. Beehaw is a very good example of this.
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As there’s no option (yet) to migrate to a different instance, and Lemmy is a FOSS project that cannot be monetized in the same way as a traditional social media site, what happens when instances start shutting down due to being unable to keep up with server hosting costs?
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I cannot speak for the iOS option available, but Jerboa is barebones. For example, you can’t even tap on a post/comment reply in your inbox to go to that comment’s permalink and view the context. This is incredibly basic functionality for any social news aggregator. Even with the fediverse in general surpassing 150,000 users, I don’t see Lemmy getting the same level of third-party app support as Reddit had.
These are all valid complaints, but I feel like you need to put this into perspective. This platform has blown up in the last week, change is going to come but it’s going to take some time. I’m sure it will go faster now that it is really taking off though.
These concerns are valid.
Some are transitory however - 1, 3 and 4 all reflect the current state of Lemmy and the similar Kbin are in currently. The Reddit issues were unexpected and people have migrated en masse to Lemmy/Kbin and have found was is in many ways Alpha software. This issues will mostly be resolved with time, and that is probably accelerated now as more people means more people interested in development, and motivated by anger at Reddit. I don’t think Lemmy/Kbin will replace Reddit right now, but I think a new trajectory has been set. Communities are hitting critical mass to keep growing.
Look at Mastodon, it’s at 1.2m-2m active users each month; it is still small fry and niche compared to Twitter but it exploded thanks to Twitter’s mess, and is growing. I think we’re seeing something similar with Lemmy and Kbin, but this is just the start of a long road and an expanded community will accelerate improvement and growth.
But point 2 is fundamental to the fediverse - fragmentation due to defederating could be a concern. I get Beehaw’s motivation but I think their actions will consign them to a niche part of the Fediverse, but that may be what they want. Ultimately I suspect the biggest servers will dominate a main interconnected fediverse through sheer size and notoriety - new servers will need to federate to the big players to grow. It’s not necessairly a bad thing - but people may end up signed up to a “main” large interconnected “fediverse” and separately to smaller niche communities they’re interested in but sitting in their own walled gardens/bubbles. It’s not necessairly a bad thing though - it is just different to what people are used to with social media like Reddit. It’ll be a trade off - servers and communities have complete independence and some will go for what suits them - part of a big fediverse or only federating to smaller aligned communities.
I am quite confident that the platform will go up in quality quick. Here is why I am confident:
One or two of the devs might have some strange opinions, but if one thing’s for sure, they solved a bug report ticket I opened in just a single day–yeah turns out it was a simple fix, but that’s a damn impressive turnaround. Just sayin’.
A lot of these issues are temporary. Also, this is all happening very fast, it’s entirely possible that some other website/service will pop up that’ll be a lot better thought out.
Reddit was already well established and functional during the Exodus of Digg, so there wasn’t much discussion about where to go. Today we have no solid alternative, so people are trying Lemmy, Kbin, Mastodon, Squabbles and other websites.
Digg is kinda before my time, what did they do to cause the exodus?
you can’t even tap on a post/comment reply in your inbox to go to that comment’s permalink and view the context.
You can, but only in the latest version. It takes multiple taps, though.
How?
Yeah… I don’t get this…
The latest version is 0.34, and even though it was released almost a week ago, it still isn’t on Google Play AFAIK. Google Play has a vetting process that takes time. It’s to make sure people aren’t putting malware on their store. I ended up uninstalling from Google Play and installed from GitHub. It’s less safe, as someone could theoretically sneak malware into the codebase, but I guess I like to live dangerously.
On 4, what’s up with this? Being fixed?
4 is already fixed in the alpha of jerboa, and the functionality is there but got accidentally hidden in the current version. You have to hold-click in your inbox to see context. These kind of hiccups are normal in a very new foss browser.
undefined> what happens when instances start shutting down due to being unable to keep up with server hosting costs?
Well idk about you guys but self hosting is always an option. Not easy, but an option
Server costs are not as high as Reddit made us believe. You can probably run a 10 user instance for less than 10€/month.
If the instance is good donations could keep it up forever, not even expensive donations. Certainly a fraction of what reddit is asking for reddit premium.
It’s one of those times where I wish I learned programming/computer science and not History and accountancy.
I studied something completely unrelated with computer science. I started with programming and then with general computer science and now I know a lot of things and I’m quite probably going to land a job in IT field next year. It’s never late to learn something new.
Coding is hard though, especially when you go past the basic tutorial stuff (Hello World, if statements, for/while loops, libraries, etc.) Actual computer science and understanding all the technical and mathematical aspects of computing is orders of magnitude harder than writing some C# or Javascript code.
Last time I actually tried to make an effort to learn how to code was back in the days when /r/CarlHProgramming was still active, long before Carl Herold was arrested on heinous child sex crimes.
If the fediverse gets very big, won’t your instance need a lot of bandwidth and storage to sync all the content?
It’s requirements will grow, but it’s still mostly text and some images. Mastodon is kind of big (not twitter big but bigger and more active than lemmy) and there are people still self hosting their instance and there’s lots of donation supported instances.
I think fediverse being instance-oriented should scalate well. As no instance really needs to hold the whole thing by its own.
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I’m doing my part!
I’m commenting to boost engagement!
I’m upvoting quality content
I’m just clicking on things because I honestly have no idea what is going on
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AnarchyChess has been contained… mostly.
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Google “Barbie movie”.
Does engagement even matter on Lemmy? They don’t really have an algorithm that sends posts based on comments, unlike YouTube.
I’m posting to celebrate pointless metrics!
Reddit killing 3rd party apps can be a blessing in disguise.
No kidding, I definitely prefer the lemmy experience. Obviously needs some polish, it’ll come. (once again guilting myself into digging into the code)
I got as far as downloading the code for the Android app. Baby steps.
I now have an ubuntu virtual machine on my laptop, next step is getting it to run the website from source. Baby steps indeed!
When one door closes another Opens lol
I’m sure there’s no way to tell, but I wonder how many are duplicate accounts to span different instances.
I think the best way to judge success is to look at the overall engagement and that one is very high.
You could probably find some ways to get a few of em but i don’t know.
You shouldn’t really need more than one or two accounts tho. Talking from kbin :)What would be the use case for having two accounts?
I’ve heard SOME people are using a separate account for consuming highly unchristian forms of media, DEFINITELY not me though
Hhahaha I see
Porn posts. It’s now on the fedi, so people may want to keep it separate
Cowards, the lot of them!
One possibility is an instance shutting down. Many instance admins are good about giving lots of notice, but sometimes that doesn’t happen.
In fact there has been at least one instance on the fediverse which the admin disappeared from the internet, and their instance just slowly degenerated until it stopped working. Were they hit bt a bus? Who knows.
Big instances might want to have some contingency plans in place. This sounds like something we should all be aware of
Maybe two instances that defederated from one another
Using different accounts to route around and still access content at instances that defederated from your original account’s instance.
You can still view content from instances that defederated from your instance as long as your instance didn’t block them.
You can still follow defederated content as long as you follow the users/instance?
In my experience, yes. I can see BeeHaw’s content event though they defederated from my home instance a couple of days ago. I’ve also commented on some of their posts, which is weird…
Your comments won’t show for beehaw or other instances, only people on your instance can see those comments.
If say, someone in Beehaw wanted to interact with Lemmy.World, they’d have to make an account on Lemmy.World or some other instance that hasn’t defederated
Lemmy is blocked by my workplace firewall, kbin isn’t. But I also want to use Jerboa.
Yeah, if I’m anything to go by, you’d need to divide these figures by at least three to get to the number of new people. Still, it’s not a bad start.
Right
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This, methinks we have a wondrous opportunity to develop something just better.
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“Thanks, reddit”
- Obama
Thanks Obama
#thatsthejoke
I just joined, but I’m excited to watch Lemmy grow!
Same. Lemmy can only get better. Reddit, I’m not sure.
What’s Reddit? I barely rememberddit
There ya go!
As mentioned here please consider donating to Lemmy development and (in our case) the Lemmy.world instance.
Lemmy development donations:
lemmy.world instance donations:
Currently on the $1/month patron tier for lemmy. Hope it helps the devs!
This is the way
I would like it if lemmy had near the numbers of reddit (although i dont think that will happen), but the userbase is already big and diverse enough to sustain some good communities that have an (imo) better feeling to them than reddit.
I would like it if lemmy had near the numbers of reddit
I wouldn’t. People need to get away from the notion that more users = better. With more users comes trolls, bad faith actors, etc. Quality over quantity.
It depends on the goal of the platform. For spending your free time on and socializing i fully agree that smaller communities are the best. However as a forum for getting information (especially on niche subjects) more users = better more or less.
Which is a good point to remember I think. Having the community grow is good for people using lemmy as it allows smaller, more niche communities to have enough people interested in that thing to actually functionally exist, but at the end of the day it doesn’t have to have the same number of users as reddit to be usable for you. Once enough people are here to be usable (which depending on what kind of communities you use, it may already be), it doesn’t really much matter how much bigger lemmy gets. After all, it isn’t some company where the point is growth at all costs.
I’m definitely sticking around. I agree.