I am theoretically switching over from Reddit to Lemmy. Finding myself spending more time on Lemmy than on Reddit. Maybe it’s because I am limited to using the desktop and can’t aimlessly browse Reddit on my iPhone. Of late, the only subreddits I cared for were on sports and their matchday threads and r/watches. I found myself aimlessly browsing through r/AskReddit and asking and answering pointless questions.
I’m trying but it’s pretty low quality stuff here
For me, the worst part is actually the duplicate communities. Sure, it’s nice that newbies can have these duplicate subs so they don’t have to learn how to traverse the Lemmyverse, but it would be really nice if duplicates could be avoided. Like, maybe if Lemmy instances kept better records of communities on other instances.
Multi-community feeds (ie multireddits) would seem paramount. Most of my browsing on reddit was through multireddits, although I’m certainly a minority in that regard. But the feature seems like it’d be a killer feature for the fediverse.
Yeah, it would be a killer feature. I would have thought it would have been better to delete duplicates, but multi-community feeds would probably be better since it would be a bit more fault-tolerant. Maybe each instance which has a community which is part of a multi-community feed could even keep copies of posts from all of the communities in the feed so if one instance goes down, it can restore the posts as soon as the downed instance is back up.
I really hate to say it but I feel the same. The first 1-3 days of the blackout were amazing. Every response was a thoughtful paragraph. Then it suddenly grew exponentially, was overtaken with shitty memes and stupid horsebeaten jokes in every comment section. The fall of Lemmy was like the fall of reddit but in 7 days instead of 7 years. I really hope it was a temporary adjustment and the userbase evens out and the community management/search tools improve.