I’m hosting and running a Lemmy just for myself, and am having no problem with it. Lemmy is great. But I’m looking to branch out, and see what else exists out there.

    • @butter@lemmy.jamestrey.comOP
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      310 months ago

      Interesting. It’s account central considered better? Or more complete? Maybe I should try one of those, what do you recommend?

      • eshep
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        410 months ago

        @caos @butter All depends on what you’re looking to get out of it. I’ve been quite happy with Friendica but it took me trying ~10 other things to learn that. I landed on it because it gave me the most compatibility with other fediverse things. Hubzilla or Streams are two others that offer even more compatibility but I haven’t yet gotten comfortable enough with either to make a decision. Everything has slightly different features to offer, so I’d recommend give em all a ride. The main base models are going to be Mastodon, Pleroma, and Misskey. Each of those have a handful of forks to look at as well. If you’re looking to self-host any of them, none are overly difficult as far as I understand.

        These pages should provide you with more info than you probably want on em all.

        fedidb.org
        jointhefediverse.net
        fediverse.observer
        fediverse.info
        fediverse.party

        • @butter@lemmy.jamestrey.comOP
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          410 months ago

          Okay. Thank you very much. I have a lot of reading to do. I’ll be sure to report on what I do and my opinion on whatever I land on.

      • Adda
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        310 months ago

        My take in this would be the following: It is simply a different paradigm, focusing on a different approach to engagement.

        On Lemmy, you follow communities (topics) and you are supposed to be interested in what happens in the world regarding that topic. In Mastodon, you follow mostly users, content creators, people (yes, you can follow hashtags, too). You are not interested in open source (a community/topic) in general, rather, you are interested in what particular your favourite developer is currently working on, and so on. You either want both of these worlds, so you make an account on Lemmy to follow topics that interest you within a UI optimized for that. And you create a Mastodon account to follow those specific people.

        Alternatively, you use only one platform and follow the content from the other platform, too, but in a UI that is not optimized for such type of content. It all depends on what are you comfortable with and what do you enjoy.

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        210 months ago

        @butter @caos in my own experience, it seems to depend what you want your feed to look like. Account central gives you a Twitter like feed of every individual account you follow, whereas something like Lemmy is going to be focused on following communities as a whole.

        Personally I use mastodon and subscribe to the lemmy communities I’m interested in seeing in my account-centered feed, good middle ground to get both in one place

    • Jay Stevens
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      310 months ago

      And you can follow Lemmy communities from Mastodon.

      In fact - I’m replying from Mastodon right now!

      The UX isn’t as nice as Lemmy natively is, but I can see comments/posts and reply just like they were Mastodon Toots. If you reply to me, it shows up in Mastodon natively as well.

      If you click the little “Fediverse” icon in Lemmy, you’ll even get taken to my home Mastodon instance. It’s a very cool feature.

  • @Cougar@lemmy.ml
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    310 months ago

    Does anyone know if there’s plans for Lemmy to support reading and posting to the larger microblogging fediverse? (similar to how kbin allows you to).