this post was submitted on 12 Jun 2023
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For less tech-savvy newbies (like me), in case there is some confusion affecting your urge to engage/donate... My friend gave me a great explanation:
-Lemmy the platform is planet Earth
-“Instances” like lemmyworld, lemmy.ml, beehaw.org, etc. are like the different countries on Earth
-When someone signs up, the user picks one instance to be a part of, like how an Earthling becomes a citizen of a country
-If you register at lemmy.world, that means your home instance/ “home country” is lemmy.world, but you can “travel” to lemmy.ml, another instance / “country”, to check out and subscribe to their community
-When you subscribe to a different instance that’s not your home instance, you can still participate in their content, and other people will be able to see which instance / “country” you’re from
-Each instance can have its own version of the same “subreddit”, so you can have a c/Memes in your home instance that is different from a c/Memes in another instance. But you can subscribe to both separately
-c/[community name] is the naming convention used here I think like r/[subreddit name] on Reddit. If talking about a community in a different instance, it's c/[community name]@[instance name] so like c/memes@lemmy.ml
-Donations will help with the cost of running lemmy.world only and not lemmy.ml, beehaw.org, etc.
Someone please correct any of this if any of it is wrong, I’ll happily edit
To add to this, you can use exclamation point "!" To link people to communities in a way that won't take them away from their home instance. Likewise you can use @ for users.
Example: !eli5@lemmy.blahaj.zone Or: @Soullioness@lemmy.world
It even auto fills when you type
Edit: might be wrong about it linking universally.
This absolutely is not true today, they create links that are absolute and refer to the host of the community in question.
Making links agnostic is an open PR which will be implemented eventually.
I'm working on a Firefox extension to add a link going to your home instance.
for a while it will result in a lot of seemingly dead links as small communities will appear as 404s until the remote instance has synced.
Or at least that's what i'm seeing occasionally when I try to copy/paste the communites onto my instances /c/ URL.
right I was just testing it and it auto fills with absolute path using "!". Using "@" I could only link local communities
This seems like a much better explanation for Lemmy compared to the email analogy everyone writes for non-tech savvy people.
Welp, tbh the dude is a pro at making a molehill out of a mountain
Is there a way to view C/Memes in all instances at once in aggregate? I don't want to miss out on what other instances are doing.
Not yet, although there is ongoing discussion about this
https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/818
I'm new here so I might not be asking the right question. As I understand it there are many subforums one on each instance with the same exact name. Are they all shown at once while browsing? Can they be?
I wasn't talking about multiforums but that's good to know too.
There can be multiple communities with the same name, that doesn't mean there are. Like how yourname@gmail.com and yourname@hotmail.com are the same "name" but a different domain.
So say for example you and your friend start up your own Lemmy instance and decide to make your own community called "Funny" where you can post jokes, without bothering to check if there was already a more popular "Funny" in someone else's instance. There's nothing stopping you and now there will be two communities called Funny, but one would be Funny@lemmy.world and yours would be Funny@whateveryoupicked.com
If your "Funny" gets to be really popular too, then other people might choose to subscribe to both Funny communities, and then posts from both would be in their feed. However they are distinctly seperate and you will continue to own and run yours and lemmy.world would own theirs.
Does that make sense? I know it's a weird concept when you're used to unique names in Reddit, but it's not all that different from r/news and r/worldnews covering similar content but controlled by different people.