I have made two for now, and three if you count mastadon.
Meta (lemmy.one)
A place to discuss or ask anything about lemmy.one's instance or moderation.
For discussion about Lemmy (the software) itself, visit [email protected]
10 is a bit much. You can use a tool like this https://github.com/wescode/lemmy_migrate to keep joined communities in sync between accounts.
Instances talk to all the other instances through federation. You only need one account on one instance- from there you can then go to communities on other instances by linking [email protected] (e.g [email protected]) and/or looking them up in the Communities tab and interact with those communities from your home instance.
For the most part as highlighted above, yes only one account/instance and you can engage with anything that instance federates with.
However there are already cases where large instances have defederated from others, in which case you will not be able to engage if your local has been defederated from a community you want to access.
For this reason it is a good idea to have multiple, but use one as a primary.
I was on beehaw before and didn't like that losing access to lemmy.world so found lemmy.one. It's good to diversify.
I've also found it useful to have multiple to compartmentalize the subjects I subscribe to on each and limit what I see when I am in different "modes".
Makes it easier to see was is active in communities local to that specific instance too.
We don't have a good sense of which instances are going to be durable long-term yet.
Additionally, If you only have one instamce, you're signing up for that server's bespoke curation of the Lemmyverse.
I currently have (I think) 5 accounts spread across Lemmy and Kbin for these reasons.
Thank you very much! I actually found the documentation for Lemmy. It explained and answered all my questions (for the moment). Feeling kinda stupid for posting this; makes me want to delete it 😅.
No need to delete! Someone may appear with the same question and search the instance, and find your post instead of getting lost and giving up hope.
Is this actually working for anyone on lemmy.one right now? I have been unable to subscribe to any community/magazine/etc... that's not already federated to lemmy.one for almost a week now.
I've tried searching by URL. I've tried searching by !name@server.
Nothing works, it just sits there. I've hit search multiple times. I've tried to be patient and just come back later and try again. I get there's growing pains, and I'm guessing this server is getting overloaded. If that's the case, the admin posting in Meta "hey we're aware of the problems" would be nice.
I'm not aware of the problems, so I can't make such a post. Looking at this now and searching by URL for magazines on kbin and communities on lemmy instances both seem to work as expected, so I can't reproduce what you're seeing.
I am aware of issues with lemmy.ml, searching for communities that are hosted on that server will often fail the first few times, and subscribing to communities that are hosted on that server often shows that subscriptions are "pending," so if that's where you are searching for communities I can see why it'd be an issue. Federation is a two-way street, so if lemmy.one can't fetch remote data then it won't work, but I've seen many other reports of people subscribing to remote communities just fine, so I don't think there's any issues we're seeing on our end.
I am on lemmy.one. Are you using jerboa? I posted a similar experience using jerboa and someone suggested logging in to the lemmy website instead and using the web search function to add communities not already connected. That totally works!
I have the same problem on both. Seems like the !name@server nor the full url ever populate. What I am finding is that after some time, if I come back and just type in a partial name (to search federated communities) it'll show up.
I mean it is a good idea to squat on a couple servers in case your main one goes under. 10 might be a bit much.
based
I mean you might as well in case something happens in one instance you have your username and profile ready. I like to hop between instances especially if one is slow or if it starts getting flooded with spam.
You don’t need an account on every instance. As long as the instance is federated you can pull the content to just one account. For example my main account is on lemmy.zip but I can search and join communities on other instances from my account on this instance
aa
I too have a few, had to move around because I don't agree with the rules.
For example I almost settled on lemmy.one, but unfortunately they do not show downvotes (nor allow you to downvote). (I cannot fathom why many people like this - probably they want to comment but don't want to criticize.)
Oh well, I suppose a good thing is that no one can downvote this comment no matter if they disagree, think that this is offtopic (which I hope this is not), etc. /s
Anyway I now settled with lemm.ee if you want to know - so far so good.
IIRC, there is research that people tend to “pile on” when they see downvotes, but not when seeing upvotes. So by disallowing them, you kind of keep all posts on the same playing field? Not that I support the decision, so I don’t actually care enough to properly look it up; but I imagine that’s the thinking, more than personal fragility.
I could imagine if there were a karma system that downvoting would also reduce your own karma, do keep people from just aimlessly downvoting everything as much? But that’s just a thought experiment, not a suggestion. 😅
There is a karma system! At least on kbin where you are. You have 1 reputation point.
Do you know what goes in to reputation points? Do downvotes have a negative effect? Genuinely asking.
You only need 1.
Well some instances have defederated each other so you should have like 3, but 10 is a ton
Check out this instance list which gives you full stats of blocked / blocked-by, uptimes, downvoting allowed, etc.
https://github.com/maltfield/awesome-lemmy-instances
I’m on VLemmy which doesn’t block and isn’t blocked by any other instances.
Diversify your portfolio/s