Hi everyone! I came here for interest to try reddit-like social networks. I’m used to the concept of microblogging (and telegram), and I’m wondering how to post my own here, as well as search for interesting posts and people/communities?

  • stoy@lemmy.zip
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    9 months ago

    If you are looking at microblogging in the feddiverse, then Mastodon is probably a good alternative.

    One thing to note about the feddiverse, it is more public than most social media, anyone can set up an instance, and on that instance they set their own rules.

    There is little stopping an instance from ignoring requests form other instances to delete or edit a comment.

    Some instances of Lemmy also shows more information than what you might expect, kbin for example shows who has up/downvoted individual comments, for example.

    So expect that anything you put on the feddiverse will stay public forever and act accordingly.

  • Kolli@sopuli.xyz
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    9 months ago

    If you use/want to use mobile, find a good client and for for relevant advice on the menus and UI for that client. Personally use Jerboa, but doesn’t matter which popular one you use.

    • fl_sp@lemmy.sdf.org
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      9 months ago

      jerboa doesn’t run on older versions of android though. lemmy works fine in a mobile browser, thankfully.

  • WanderingVentra@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    Use lemmyverse.net to find interesting communities and instances.

    There are a couple of communities focused in finding other communities, like
    !communitypromo@lemmy.ca !newcommunities@lemmy.world !trendingcommunities@feddit.nl

    And general fediverse news:
    !fediverse@lemmy.world
    !fediverse@lemmy.ml

    Contribute to communities you like even if they’re kinda empty. The important part is to get the conversation moving in a lot of these places, and someone has to start that.

    Also remember to play around with different sorting algorithms. If active is getting stale, try hot. If you aren’t seeing enough small communities, try scaled. I also like using Top X Hours, from 6 to 24.

  • Kolli@sopuli.xyz
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    9 months ago

    Also, before posting on a community, make sure to skim the community info, rules are found there. This one seems to not be intented for support questions, usually they are named “Meta” or something similar.

  • owenfromcanada@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    The big difference between lemmy and microblogging is lemmy is organized by topic, not by people. You don’t follow people, you follow communities (that are each based around a topic). And if you want to post something, you find a community around that topic (or create one if it doesn’t exist).

    Have fun!

  • Ziggurat@sh.itjust.works
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    9 months ago

    Big difference between microblock like Calckey or Xitter and threaded conversation like Lemmy or reddit is that, here you post in a community to trigger a discussion. For example if you want to talk about rpg you go to !rpg@ttrpg.network and if you want to talk about world news you go to !world@lemmy.world and so on. The great part is that you’ll interact way more than with just people following you.

    If you’re interested by the micro-blog feature, check mbin which has threaded conversations and micro blogs together (and of course fully compatible with lemmy).

  • neidu2@feddit.nl
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    9 months ago

    Not a very in-depth guide, but more of a “cliff notes” kind of answer:

    • There are many lemmy servers (referred to as instances). These are connected together, so you can view content of one instance, even though your username belongs to a different instance.

    • Instance admins set their own rules. This includes refusing to federate with other instances for reasons that can be ideological, concern of quality, or anything else really.

    • It doesn’t really matter that much which instance you join. It mostly boils down to if the instance has a strong ideological lean that you may or may not agree with (such as lemmygrad), whether they allow nsfw content, and overall what kind of rules they enforce. Personally I use feddit.nl for no particular reason other than being popular enough to have a reasonably broad userbase and stability. Some instances also have automated censorship of certain words or phrases.

    • Note that multiple communities can have the same name, as they’re on different instances. This tends to result in one “main” community as well as a handful of smaller less active ones. When posting or looking for a community, you most likely want to make sure you do so in the larger ones. There’s nothing wrong with being subscribed to several seemingly identical communities.

  • bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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    9 months ago

    Despite the fact that this isn’t Reddit, I’d recommend you peruse the “Reddiquette” guide. It’s a very good code of conduct for using this style of forum.

  • livus@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    @azriel welcome! I see you made your first post okay!

    I think if you’re on lemmy you post as threads in various communities. (Kbin/mbin also posts shortform blogs that are more like mastodon and interface with it). You can also create your own communities on most instances.

    The easiest way to find communities when you’re first starting is to either join from all or to use the Communities tab and search.

    Worth noting that it doesn’t really tell you how many people are subscribed to a community, only how many subscribe from your own instance, so you can’t always tell what is active until you get there.

    If you want a list of things to search for, one good starting place is the lists at kbin.social/magazines/collections, just copy and paste what interests you into blahaj community search.