What do you think might be some fun, positive ways for instances to distinguish themselves?
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Instances of any fediverse software, to be clear.
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Instances of any fediverse software, to be clear.
I am a big fan of content-specific instances. Some instances off the top of my head that fit this description:
- bookwormstory.social - Instance about the Ascendance of a Bookworm series
- ani.social - Instance about anime/manga/Japanese media
- slrpnk.net - Instance focused on the climate crisis and related issues
- programming.dev - Instance focused on software development
- startrek.website - Instance about Star Trek
- literature.cafe - Instance about books and writing
...and I am sure there are many others. I just think that having a focus like that provides a more interesting local instance environment than a large, generalist instance, though both have a place.
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Instances of any fediverse software, to be clear.
There is no need for this.
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There is no need for this.
Why do you think so?
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Instances of any fediverse software, to be clear.
I'd always think about how neat it'd be if there was a Lemmy frontend that did theming, then themed instances could take it even further, like an LCARS interface for startrek.website
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I'd always think about how neat it'd be if there was a Lemmy frontend that did theming, then themed instances could take it even further, like an LCARS interface for startrek.website
There is theming. lemmy.zip uses a different theme as the default for example.
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I am a big fan of content-specific instances. Some instances off the top of my head that fit this description:
- bookwormstory.social - Instance about the Ascendance of a Bookworm series
- ani.social - Instance about anime/manga/Japanese media
- slrpnk.net - Instance focused on the climate crisis and related issues
- programming.dev - Instance focused on software development
- startrek.website - Instance about Star Trek
- literature.cafe - Instance about books and writing
...and I am sure there are many others. I just think that having a focus like that provides a more interesting local instance environment than a large, generalist instance, though both have a place.
Yes, like I just learned about gearhead.town which is focused on vehicles (cars, motorcycles, etc.), which is an idea I’d had myself but I’m nowhere near skilled enough to operate an instance right now.
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I am a big fan of content-specific instances. Some instances off the top of my head that fit this description:
- bookwormstory.social - Instance about the Ascendance of a Bookworm series
- ani.social - Instance about anime/manga/Japanese media
- slrpnk.net - Instance focused on the climate crisis and related issues
- programming.dev - Instance focused on software development
- startrek.website - Instance about Star Trek
- literature.cafe - Instance about books and writing
...and I am sure there are many others. I just think that having a focus like that provides a more interesting local instance environment than a large, generalist instance, though both have a place.
Few more listed on the links here
https://fedecan.ca/en/guide/lemmy/for-users/how-to-find-communities#_3-look-through-other-instances-
mander.xyz is nice for all the STEM communities
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There is theming. lemmy.zip uses a different theme as the default for example.
Eh that looks more like just a custom color palette, I'm thinking of something way deeper than that
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I am a big fan of content-specific instances. Some instances off the top of my head that fit this description:
- bookwormstory.social - Instance about the Ascendance of a Bookworm series
- ani.social - Instance about anime/manga/Japanese media
- slrpnk.net - Instance focused on the climate crisis and related issues
- programming.dev - Instance focused on software development
- startrek.website - Instance about Star Trek
- literature.cafe - Instance about books and writing
...and I am sure there are many others. I just think that having a focus like that provides a more interesting local instance environment than a large, generalist instance, though both have a place.
Crazy that there's an instance about Ascendance of a Bookworm. I've just been reading this!
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Eh that looks more like just a custom color palette, I'm thinking of something way deeper than that
Like winamp skins for lemmy?
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I am a big fan of content-specific instances. Some instances off the top of my head that fit this description:
- bookwormstory.social - Instance about the Ascendance of a Bookworm series
- ani.social - Instance about anime/manga/Japanese media
- slrpnk.net - Instance focused on the climate crisis and related issues
- programming.dev - Instance focused on software development
- startrek.website - Instance about Star Trek
- literature.cafe - Instance about books and writing
...and I am sure there are many others. I just think that having a focus like that provides a more interesting local instance environment than a large, generalist instance, though both have a place.
The nice thing with these instances is content discovery (easy to find more communities about a single topic), but there's a downside as well: they create a lot of centralization in Lemmy.
If you're mostly on Lemmy for a specific topic, and one instance has consolidated almost all discussion around that topic, then your entire Lemmy experience is controlled by a single instance. In other words, despite the whole network being decentralized, users in such situations are still getting effectively the same kind of downsides they would get on something like Reddit.
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Instances of any fediverse software, to be clear.
I'm a fan of local instances, like at least for a country and language.
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Instances of any fediverse software, to be clear.
Mastodon where you can't use the letter "e": https://www.vice.com/en/article/its-like-tweeting-but-you-cant-use-the-letter-e/ ( oulipo.social )
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Instances of any fediverse software, to be clear.
Language instances come to mind
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Instances of any fediverse software, to be clear.
Activity
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Instances of any fediverse software, to be clear.
- Have an actual mission statement beyond just being a general purpose instance (e.g Beehaw, my instance, most of the topic-based ones, etc)
- Replace the default frontend with anything better than Lemmy-UI
- Building on #1, try to curate the experience
- Block the toxic aspects as best you can by default. Don't make new users discover and deal with the toxicity on their own. There's plenty of other general purpose instances that will let people rawdog everything (and everyone) on the Fediverse if that's what someone wants.
- Focus on "quality over quantity" and block all the content repost bots / defed from the instances that do nothing but repost Reddit content
- Consider hiding/disallowing Politics communities and don't allow accounts who post with an obvious agenda.
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- Have an actual mission statement beyond just being a general purpose instance (e.g Beehaw, my instance, most of the topic-based ones, etc)
- Replace the default frontend with anything better than Lemmy-UI
- Building on #1, try to curate the experience
- Block the toxic aspects as best you can by default. Don't make new users discover and deal with the toxicity on their own. There's plenty of other general purpose instances that will let people rawdog everything (and everyone) on the Fediverse if that's what someone wants.
- Focus on "quality over quantity" and block all the content repost bots / defed from the instances that do nothing but repost Reddit content
- Consider hiding/disallowing Politics communities and don't allow accounts who post with an obvious agenda.
Consider hiding/disallowing Politics communities
To add on that, lemmy.zip announced in their last update that they hide political communities from the All feed by default
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Instances of any fediverse software, to be clear.
I'm not sure if I've properly explored the idea, but a specific "digital culture" would help a lot. Inside jokes, ways of speaking, emojis, memes, etc. really help an instance to distinguish itself from others.
The best example is Hexbear (ik but just hear me out for a second). Their culture is borrowed from the edgier side of the leftist internet, but they still have a style of their own. They were so recogniseable even, that a user claimed to be scared of seeing pronouns next to someone's username because they knew it would be a comment from Hexbear (they used to be the only instance with such features, before others followed suit).
I have a hypothesis that a good amount of issolation, or at least encouraging users to only post on communities on your instance, would be good for developping some kind of culture, maybe even kinship between them.
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Mastodon where you can't use the letter "e": https://www.vice.com/en/article/its-like-tweeting-but-you-cant-use-the-letter-e/ ( oulipo.social )
Lmao, that's such a goofy idea, I kinda love it