

Server performance is a big one, lemmy.world was really slow for a while because it was the biggest one


Server performance is a big one, lemmy.world was really slow for a while because it was the biggest one


There’s already a tool for moving over the subscriptions: https://github.com/wescode/lemmy_migrate


Can you give an example outside American politics?


I don’t really agree, Lemmy made sure that posts+comments show up in Mastodon and that Mastodon users can post+comment to Lemmy.
More compatibility would be great though.


No way, are you the k_o_t?


The UI of squabbles.io actually feels good for this. It’s a shame it’s closed-source and doesn’t federate.


Imagine if you subscribed to a community on Lemmy and it only showed posts and comments AFTER you subscribed…
If you’re on a small instance, that’s actually the case with Lemmy, lol. You can only see a remote community if someone from your instance subscribed to it.


Yeah that, it’s the one libertarian standpoint that I really disagree with so I was just curious


What’s your opinion on regulations for companies?


I know this wasn’t your point, but I’ve actually been looking for a Simpsons shitposting community. Thanks!


It’s like there is an r/technology and an r/tech with only small differences. Hopefully they’ll either become more different or somehow merge


Links kind of break things because they take you to a different website, even though it’s content you can access from the one you’re on. I think there are people working on fixing that.


You don’t need to create more than one account, you can access everything from just one (unless a server goes down). I guess you can just use them like you use Reddit alts
why does everyone want to own the libs
as an open source developer i own multiple libs
i would happily pay people to take them from me
you do not want to own libs. its so much work
Maybe one day these Twitter links will be replaced by Mastodon cross-posts
I can easily separate them, but I choose not to when any money spent on the art still benefits the artist