Spyke

Redditors migration is impossible if they're recommended hundreds of alternatives (see link)

Seeing sticky posts on r/RedditAlternatives like https://teddit.net/r/RedditAlternatives/comments/1467a5s/

I don't see how anything can be coordinated when so many options are presented in a confusing way.

Of course, they don't have to choose Lemmy / kbin instances, but I'm worried that a lot of people will stay on Reddit given the inability to properly communicate alternatives.

(Bonus: most platforms listed here ( https://teddit.net/r/RedditAlternatives/comments/yttdlc/list_of_active_reddit_alternatives_v8/ ) are terrible and Lemmy is relegated to the "less active" section; furthermore only lemmy.ml is listed, instead of https://join-lemmy.org for example)

View original on lemmy.world

Perhaps, experienced users of the suggested website could create posts that recommend it or its alternatives and provide explanations on how they function. This would help people better understand and determine if they find it appealing. Like you said, a list doesn’t help that much.

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lemmy.world

I don't understand how discord is even sort of similar - how can a live messaging app substitute for a forum?

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You can make posts and create threads inside threads now. The tags and roles are pretty useful for a community too. Still, doesn't compare to an actual forum, especially since you can't vote or sort the comments.

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lemmy.world

Bluesky is invite-only and nothing like Reddit.

And while Lemmy and Kbin are mentioned quite a bit in some places, they don't seem to be well discussed yet, to say the least.

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Leer10reply
beehaw.org

I get really annoyed about the acrid pushback because of Lemmy's creators, and I usually deflect to unaffiliated server hosts or if it's really strong, mention kbin since we all connect freely.

It's just so important to me that the migration goes to a federated platform and not another central one.

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Tobireply
lemmygrad.ml

I'm looking for a more central platform myself, I don't like how federation unnecessarily complicates things and i especially don't like the drama between instances

1

Tildes is pretty good in that regard. Though you can't create groups (= subreddits) yourself iirc. I tried switching to there but I actuallly find Lemmy more convincing and fitting to my own use of Reddit.

1

Tildes is mentioned often as it seems to be the most visually like Reddit on first inspection. But it really isn't.

Their philosophy is totally different than Reddit. They want text posts only with only serious, long form discussion. No lighter topics like memes, which make up a humongous portion of content on Reddit.

It's invite only. You can't just easily sign up for it. Most people aren't going to try to find someone to ask for an invite when they can just click back to Reddit.

Unfortunately the RIF is Fun dev has picked Tildes to go to, which makes for even more people talking about it. But Tildes doesn't want to be a Reddit replacement at all. It wants to be a small, insular community with only serious, long form discussion.

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lemmy.world

You don't break a monopoly by directing everyone to the next monopoly.

Federated or not, you don't want everyone on one platform.

0

They don’t even have to be on Lemmy. Other platforms in the Fediverse (like Kbin) are compatible with us.

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lemmy.fmhy.ml

I came to Lemmy because I was reading so much about it, but to be honest I don't understand the federation concept well yet or how it impacts usage. The UI and basic concept seems intuitive enough from registering a few minutes ago and joining a few communities and replying to messages, but I still need to learn more about how it works and hopefully someone (Christian maybe?) releases an app that does for Lemmy what Apollo did for Reddit.

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Redditors migration is impossible if they're recommended hundreds of alternatives (see link) | Spyke