The number one rule of getting people to change their behavior is to reduce friction. Someone needs to make a client that can mask a lot of the federation behind the scenes so that non-tech folks can just hop on and start browsing
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- [email protected]: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_[email protected]~
If we are going to be mainstream, we really need an app that abstracts away most of the technical aspects of Lemmy.
Sure, you and I might understand federation and like it - your average user will see this wall of text explaining how it works as a brick wall and give up.
So an app that just says something like "pick a server, don't worry you can still see content from others, here's our suggestion" and then "create an account and login" will work as even many games work like this.
Then the main feed needs to be abstracted away, replace long URLs with "community name" and let users subscribe and browse without any subdivisions (unless they want to filter it out). Make sure the interface treats everything as if it were a simple subreddit, they see a group about a game they enjoy and they subscribe - no friction.
I completely agree with the idea. I was initially intimidated about the sign up process a week ago. Left it and came back only because Iβm determined not to use Reddit anymore. Also helps that Iβm using mlem. Itβs not the best but gets the job done. Thereβs improvements to be made, but if these suggestions are looked upon and implemented, it can really help.
Also I think having a popular person making a YouTube video on the sign up process might not be a bad idea. Visual guides are better than written ones for common users
Mlem looks great! IOS only though rip
Well if we give it time, there will be more.
Yeah a good Lemmy client app would probably help users migrate easier. I tried the only one on the android play store (Jebril) but it crashes immediately when I log in
Guidance over complexity and choice
Better UI and UX - visual guidance, separation, clarity
Making links not redirect to other instances you're not logged in to
Making links not redirect to other instances youβre not logged in to
definitely this
Honestly, I think the Reddit blackout already is pretty good. If the closed subs already had an alternative community or instance to recommend that would also be great.
Synergy with Mastodon would be nice. As far as I know Lemmy and Mastodon aren't completely linked but also not completely separate. Would be awesome if I could now also just follow people or hashtags there.
But all in all I think the current direction is great. The relevant projects seem to be getting a large influx of bug reports, feature requests and pull requests. We'll probably be seeing huge changes in the coming months.
@[email protected] created a sticky post that is a work in progress, however I believe it is something that answers your question
One feature I'd really like is being able to click that link without being "logged out" as that link takes me to lemmy.world and my account is on lemmy.ca
I think little things like that turn away new users who get annoyed by all the "glitches" so to speak.
Clicking a link should first check if the link is to another lemmy instance, and if it is it should attempt to open that post while remaining in this instance.
I think if you use Lemmy (and mastodon and other fedi platforms) through a client you can avoid this issue. I use Tusky and Pinafore for mastodon, but haven't found a good one yet for lemmy
I'd fix inconsistencies between instances. Like, I made this account in Beehaw and now I literally can't create a community anywhere until I make a new account. It shouldn't be like this.
Yes, this is my first time. I was never really a fan of Twitter or similar social medias, preferring the subreddit and thread based nature of Reddit.
I definitely like the people and interactions here way more than on Reddit. However, there are clearly a lot of technical challenges to solve with server management and the general UI experience. I often get confused on how things work, especially with regards to federation.
Hopefully, these issues get ironed out over the next few months or years and I can safely call Lemmy a great Reddit replacement.
Explain to people how it works! The most difficult barrier for adopting the Fediverse is a lack of basic understanding.
It took me trying five different sites to join. Two asked for an essay, and neither have responded a day later. This is not tenable.
I'm a dev, and from the statistics I've gathered form abandonment is the largest factor towards failure to take an action. Having a form fail, having to "apply", or having a failure message makes people leave. We have to fix this problem to allow for better adoption.
There needs to be some sort of central system to join. A site whose sole existence is to house an app with four inputs, and a button. Username, password, confirm password, email, and sign up. After this it should take a list of sites that volunteer to take users, and randomly place them into one. If it fails, or takes too long, it should try another. It should then inform them of the site, email them, and finally redirect them to the site logged in.
This would be difficult to implement as it requires these sites to allow third party sign ups but this would solve the form abandonment problem. Allowing this would also allow for apps to do the same.