• @spacemanspiffy
      link
      English
      84 days ago

      Not OP but use emails as an example.

      You can sign up for an email account with many providers. They handle your account and store your mail. You can still send and receive emails to people from other email providers/domains.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        64 days ago

        I’m not a huge fan of the email analogy, because nobody knows how email works who isn’t a tech nerd anyways.

        See: people who ask what your gmail is, not what your email is.

        I’ve started explaining it as picking a user and server name you like, and then that’s how and where you login to the ‘fediverse’.

        Less tech people have seemed to follow that at least, since it’s a much simpler thing they can understand: they get what a username is, they get what logging in is, and they get that a username and a login lets you access something.

        And before everyone comes in with why that’s a horrible explanation, I know. It’s terrible, but it’s terrible enough that I’ve got family members who can’t keep left and right clicking sorted out to understand what I’m trying to say and how all these things are related.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      44 days ago

      So this is my third go at replying. First attempt was damn near collage level. Second attempt found me rewriting the Internet for Dummies book that originally taught me about how the internet works when I was 10. Seriously, if you can find a copy of that particular edition, give it a read. It’s the third edition from 1995. You may need help from [email protected] to find it though.

      Honestly, the Fediverse has the same problem that the internet itself has. That is that it is far easier to just use than it is to explain what it is but the fediverse and the internet itself work almost exactly the same way, at least at the user level.

      I’m going to completely ignore everything under the hood for the sake of simplicity. Additionally I’m going to over simplify to the point of inaccuracy, because it gets really complicated really quickly once you scratch the surface.

      Imagine a spider web. Each point where the web interconnects is a server. Each server on that web can communicate with every other server on that web (don’t ask how, that’s part of the bit we are ignoring).

      Now each fediverse service is kinda on its own web. Lemmy is on one web, Mastodon is on another, Pixelfed another, websites, email, Matrix, NextCloud, XMPP, IRC, Gopher, Usenet, and a million more are each on their own little webs.

      It doesn’t really matter which Lemmy server you pick to join the conversation on Lemmy but your account is only with that server. But because that server is a part of the Lemmy web you can talk to anyone that is also on that web.

      That’s the best Eli5 explanation I can give. It’s not particularly accurate because anything, any system, involving more than about 3 people will contain more exceptions than rules. And the fediverse has a lot more than 3 people in it.

      My advice for new users on the fediverse is, once you have decided what service (Lemmy, Mastodon, Pixelfed, email, or whatever) either join a server that is most in line with your interests, or look up the largest servers of that service and pick one from the lower end of the top 20.

      • @JustAnotherKay
        link
        English
        13 days ago

        (Don’t ask how)

        I imagine you just couldn’t find the words at the time but I would have, with relative accuracy, summed this up as:

        “Each server on that web can communicate with every other server on that web by using ‘secret’ information to determine a path to get there”

        Each federated service is on its own web

        I know you said simplification to the point of inaccuracy, but while I’m being pedantic:

        “Each federated service is on its own web, but imagine they overlap with each other in such a way to bleed into a single web”