I wrote a guide to help users with their migration to Lemmy
This guide will help new lemmy users find and subscribe-to (remote) lemmy subreddits communities
I think you should make a mention about the sorting options, Lemmy sorts posts by “Active” by default, if you want a more Reddit-like experience then you might want to sort by “Hot”, and if you want a more forum-like experience then sort by “New Comments”
https://join-lemmy.org/docs/en/users/03-votes-and-ranking.html
I bounce between all of them. I really like the active since it’s different from the alien site. Just like old forums.
Added to the article. Thanks for the suggestion :)
I have a question that’s probably more specific to using Mlem to access Lemmy instances. How can I use that app to see notifications on Lemmy? I had a bunch of responses to a comment I made and had no idea because I was browsing on Mlem. No way to easily access my own posts/comments, nor see responses to those. I had to get into the web app to see that I had like 7 notifications.
You should ask in /c/mlemapp
And if it’s a bug, please report it on GitHub
Edit: A quick search on github issues brought this up
Ah, thanks for linking to the Mlem community. I asked it there, but based on the GitHub link you shared, it’s probably just a matter of the dev needing to implement it and hasn’t been able to yet. I think I’ll just continue with the web app for now.
Thank you for this =)
The only thing I need to improve this article is a short video demonstration showing how to find and add remote lemmy communities
Are there any video producers on Lemmy that can help? You’ll easily get thousands unique views per day if you make a short “Guide to Lemmy” video :)
Still getting used to lemmy, was wondering if the sorting of comments was a thing you could change (permanently) user side or if it was server side? Also the auto-refreshing ‘home page’ that scoots everything down is bad on desktop. Not a whole lot of ‘googleable’ information yet on lemmy
This is absolutely amazing! Really well done!
Suddenly my server started getting thousands of requests per minute and my varnish cache hit rate jumped to 99%. Thank god for varnish!
Looks like the reddit blackout is #1 on the frontpage of hackernews, and this article is #2.
I actually posted this article to hackernews, but I never got a single upvote. This isn’t my first time getting on the frontpage of hackernews, but it always happens when someone else reposts my link.
Can anyone tell me how the fuck hackernews’ algorithm works to where I can’t ever get traction but someone else does after me?
This was great! Thanks!
Fresh Reddit refugee here. Thanks for this!
Thank you for this, this looks great
found this as well - https://lemmymap.feddit.de/
Thanks! Yeah, I linked to it in the bottom of the article. There’s some other good links there that you may want to checkout as well :)