verstehe ich, wenn man derzeit lieber woanders weiterliest. nur so als hinweis, über die apps ist die UI egal, und bei manchen ist (anders als bei jerboa) auch die server-version egal. liftoff zum beispiel erlaubt das clientseitige zusammenführen mehrerer instanzen. ansonsten kann ich auch empfehlen, über eine der anderen großen instanzen (lemmy.world, etc) posts von feddit.de zu lesen.
Quetzacoatl
same here, I'd be happy about an invite too!
before leaving as in before switching to another community while browsing? or as in when you unsubscribe? and what if I never leave
or we could just all stop caring about the vote count instead! why even pay attention to that? I'd honestly rather have two good comments on a post than 300 upvotes, or view counts, or whatever. couldn't care less about any of those.
If you decide on TNG, make sure to look up viewing guides on TNG (they should be around here somewhere). Like most Star Trek series, they're off to a bit of a bumpy start, and I'd heavily recommend only watching the last episode of season 1, the five or so highest rated episodes of season 2, and then jumping in fully at season three. You can come back later to rewatch what you missed, but it will make for a much more pleasant start.
Solid advice all around. Man am I glad to be here again!
First of all, it has one big difference: What types of communities you see when you browse the "Local" communities (on most apps or web UIs it's gonna be a setting at the top). "Local" shows you threads posted in communities that are on your instance; "All" shows you the whole network, similar to /r/all on reddit; and "Subscribed" shows you only the communities you're interested in, similar to the main page on reddit. It makes sense to switch this setting to All for the time being, and to see what's going on everywhere else and which communities develop; to Local when you get confused, e.g. with lots of posts in languages you don't speak or lots of duplicate posts; and to Subscribed once things have settled down and once you have found your communities that you're interested in (and other stuff that you're not interested in becomes more and more on the All feed).
There's some eceptions when the "linked instances" structure does make a difference:
- during heavy development (like in the early stages right now), federation might break here and there (for example right now between some servers using on older version of the Lemmy backend and those that already updated). also, there's probably gonna be multiple similar communities on various instances (nearly every instance has a "main" community and a "Lemmy discussion/reddit bashing" community). this will all settle down with time, federation in general will be more stable, and "main" communities will develop, with smaller alternative ones spread around that can take over if the main one is taken offline.
- when instances decide to "defederate" from each other. this is a conscious decision by the admins (standard setting is to share everything with everybody else, but specific instances can be added to a blocklist). this means their content doesn't show up on your instance, and users from those instances can't interact with one another anymore. this happens at the moment with lots of NSFW instances and the more tame ones, but once moderation tools are improved, it will settle as well.
Quick tips: Don't be too stressed about "missing" content on other instances, right now it's still early days and a bit chaotic. And do consider making multiple accounts on other instances, and checking out what's different. the apps that are being developed right now make switching between multiple accounts easy, and one day will hopefully bring bookmarks and comments across multiple accounts together as well. Shop around for different instances and apps and see what's out there,, read people's recommendations, try and find instance and community lists. And in general, don't see your current account as the only way you'll interact with the Lemmy network (just as alt accounts were a thing on Reddit), and don't expect the network to serve you everything on a golden platter, you'll have to do some hunting around for the cool things, a bit like in the internet days before Web 2.0 happened – but that's half the fun!
eine mögliche lösung: mietverträge weiterverkaufbar machen ohne vermieterzustimmung.
arbeit, keine gewohnte umgebung, kein garten, etc.
das betrifft aber auch leute in großen alten wohnungen: neue, von der größe her besser passende sind gleich teuer oder noch teurer als der alte mietvertrag, deshalb wohnt die oma auf 120 m² im stadtzentrum, dabei wären 50 m² in parknähe viel besser, während die jungfamilien in 2-3 räumen dahinvegitieren.
bester name für eine app bzw. ein service seit lang imho. klingt lustig, einfach zu tippen, wiedererkennungswert, unverwechselbar.
einige tulpen in der dortigen community wollen den entwickler dazu bringen sich auf "voyager" umzutaufen... so ein absoluter schwachsinn, demolieren wir einfach mutwillig unsere einzigartigkeit und unser SEO-ranking, nur um dann einen beschissenen namen zu haben der auch hundert andere dinge (darunter auch einige apps!) bezeichnet, und mit einem coolnessfaktor für 12jährige. so ein käse. deswegen gibt es keine netten dinge mehr.
ich hoffe der entwickler bleibt bei wefwef, und kündigt zum nächsten ersten april dann groß eine namensänderung an, nur um dann zu revealen dass der neue name weewee lautet; das würde diese engstirnigen einfallslosen angepassten idioten dann wohl auch in panik versetzen.
It's also completely boring, derivative, and not unique in ans way. There's hundreds of things called Voyager, from space probes over (space) ships to night clubs and mythological beings and... just no. Wefwef on the other hand is great, it's unique, it's fun, it's easily pronounceable, but most of all, it's memorable.
and smaller screens? 145 x 65 mm would be perfect! and anything larger than 150 x 70 is too big.