this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2023
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OP's post is about having specialized instances, making hopping around necessary. It's not convenient enough as it is.
Making specialized instances does not in any way make hopping around necessary. If you join a specialized instance that doesn't already sub to the communities you want, you just add them.
Example: I join a Star Trek themed instance that has a bunch of locally created communities. I want to sub to all those, but i ALSO want to sub to the homelab community on beehaw. I just subscribe to [email protected] FROM the star trek instance I am a member of.
Conversely, if someone has an account on beehaw.org and they want to read a star trek community based on that star trek instance, they just need to sub to it FROM beehaw.org.
I know. We all know.
Convenience is the issue here. You can't directly go to an instance and start subscribing, you need to take unnecessary detours.
By hopping around, do you mean changing your account to one on another instance, or viewing a list of communities on an instance, or something else?
I don't feel that changing accounts is necessary because of the magic of federation. But I don't know how to view a list of communities in an instance without leaving your home instance. That would be a cool feature, but is only really important when you're initially picking all your subscriptions.
Exactly, it's really inconvenient right now. And it's really important for the usability of what OP suggested.
If I simply link to a cool community I found, like https://beehaw.org/c/programming, you can't follow that link conveniently if you're from another instance.
And I highly disagree with only being important at the start. It's a big hurdle that stifles growth right now and in the future.
You can definitely sub to external communities from a separate instance, I have a bunch from Lemmy.ml show up in my world feed
Agreed, what needs to happen is an option that allows users to follow links from foreign instances in their home instance seamlessly. I have to imagine with the ramped up amount of development in lemmy that some of the devs must be working on it.
No, that's not right You can follow any community from any instance with your account, doesn't matter where you registered your account. I just subscribed to https://beehaw.org/c/programming from lemmy.pt user account
this is buggy. Pardon the nsfw, but it doesn't work for gonewild@lemmynsfw .com
That's more of the interface you're using a fault for not interpreting links correctly - it should be obvious that url/c/communityname should be interpreted as a community, just as [email protected] (right now jerboa is interpreting it as an email address) should also be interpreted as one, and if you remove the ! It should be interpreted as a username.
But most interfaces are open source, so give them time and someone (maybe even you) can submit a pull request that fixes it. That's the beauty of open source - in time the bugs get ironed out because it's a collaborative effort.
I saw that something like [email protected] should work. It doesn't work for me now though
That's the string you need to put in the search and go through there. Clunky and inconvenient.
The funny part is that the search also returns posts where that link works, but don't know what the issue here is. Regardless, copy+pasteing a universal link should be an easy thing to do and not require manual typing.
Edit: Okay, so to do those links you have to type it out like you would a reddit link:
[[email protected]](/c/[email protected])
which results in [email protected]Yes you can subscribe to and read/reply to that community from any lemmy instance. You just need to add it if the instance doesn't already federate with it.
Go to 'Communities' at the top of your instance homepage then in the search bar put the url of the community you want to add. (example: https://beehaw.org/c/programming)
This next part is undocumented, and might just be a bug. But this is the magic part.
On the next page, change the top search dropdown from Communities to All.
You will see the community you want to sub to in the results. It will say something like.
[email protected] - 0 subscribers
Click it, then on the top right pane click "Subscribe"
Done
Jesus Christ. I'm well aware of how you can subscribe to other instances. This is about convenience, with problems arising from situations like I described above.
Having some additional messaging about how communities work, and how to subscribe to them would help. I'm sorry that I assumed you didn't know how to do that. I meant no offense but there's no harm in providing free information that you (or someone else reading this post) might not know about.
There's no way for an instance to know that you have an account on some other instance so the subscribe button assumes you are a local user. Maybe that could be addressed in the future, I don't know what the plans are.
At a minimum I would think the subscribe button could have some logic that can detect whether you are logged in or not and then give you some options. Like, log into your account if you have one on this instance, or if you don't here are instructions for adding this community to YOUR instance.