What Fediverse services do you use?
cross-posted from: lemm.ee/post/57576884
There's so many ways to interact with the Fediverse. The most popular, by far, seems to be Mastodon, but Lemmy, Misskey, and Pixelfed are also relatively popular. Kbin used to be popular, but it has apparently been abandoned, and is mostly dead at this point.I recently learned that Mbin is a thing, checked it out, and it looked really cool! Has anyone used it? How different is it from Lemmy? I hear they have better integration with Mastodon.
What Fediverse services do you actually, regularly use?
For me, it's mostly Lemmy, though I do hop on Mastodon every now and then.
small44
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •gon [he]
Als Antwort auf small44 • • •Oberyn
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •gon [he]
Als Antwort auf Oberyn • • •Fermiverse
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •gon [he]
Als Antwort auf Fermiverse • • •Evidently!
Why Mbin, though?
Fermiverse
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •I already liked kbin. The general look/feel and structure was more appealing then lemmy or mastodon.
Not sure if I stay but I made accounts all over and will continue I think, until a "winner" builds up.
The whole fediverse is pretty cluttered to be honest.
gon [he]
Als Antwort auf Fermiverse • • •Truer things have been said, but not many.
There's so many different services with similar features... The amount of Mastodon-like things is just overwhelming. The threadiverse is also a little hard to wrap one's head around.
Fermiverse mag das.
Fermiverse
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •I am coming from a time when IRC, Gopher, usenet etc. was all we had. Then suddenly the www was the latest and the greatest.
So the fediverse gives me old days vibes.
But when you come from the time of centralized services it has a really existing threshold until you feel comfortable with it.
I hope that the federation of the different services will go and in the end we have a centralized access that collects and presents it in a streamlined way.
Still a way to go but lemmy, mbin etc. already are on a good way. Still my statement is valid, unfortunate.
irotsoma
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •gon [he]
Als Antwort auf irotsoma • • •irotsoma
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •gon [he]
Als Antwort auf irotsoma • • •Mario Vavti
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •gon [he]
Als Antwort auf Mario Vavti • • •Oh... That's interesting. I think I've heard of it, but I don't know anything about it. A quick look-through makes it sound very interesting... I'll definitely check it out.
Do you have any suggestions on how to get started using hubzilla?
Mario Vavti
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •Hubzilla.de
hub.hubzilla.degon [he]
Als Antwort auf Mario Vavti • • •zeitverschreib [friendica]
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • •@gon [he] Mainly Friendica, some Pixelfed.
I run several other services, though, just to keep up.
Fediverse hat dies geteilt.
gon [he]
Als Antwort auf zeitverschreib [friendica] • • •zeitverschreib [friendica] mag das.
Palladiumasteroid
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •Currently I'm using wafrn and PieFed, but I've used misskey, Sharkey, goblin, akkoma (never tried pleroma), Mastodon (didn't like it), Lemmy, Kbin (didn't like it, so I haven't even tried to joing a mbin instance), bookwyrm and Friendica.
And I may be forgetting something, but those are the Fediverse software I've used the most
I wanna try hubzilla or one of its forks, but I've heard they're a nightmare for mobile use.
gon [he]
Als Antwort auf Palladiumasteroid • • •I've learned about so many different federated services with this post, it's crazy...
What do you like about Wafrn?
Quite frankly, I feel like Misskey/Sharkey/Mastodon/Pleroma are basically the same. I mean, sure, they do have some differences, but it really doesn't matter. Maybe I'm missing something, but I'm very meh on all of those. I keep Mastodon, but that's it.
Also, thoughts on Piefed vs Lemmy? I've been getting a lot of feedback on that and I'm starting to get the impression Piefed has a lot of potential, maybe more than Lemmy. What do you think?
Palladiumasteroid
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •Wafrn: As of now it's the Tumblr-style microblog platform that it's closer in terms of content and energy to the original. Goblin has the pro that being a misskey fork has more app options, while wafrn only has only that for now it's in close beta (although I access it through the phone browser no issues), but Goblin seems more serious in its content and interactions (or at least that was my perception)
I think misskey and it's forkeys are it own thing in both terms of features and user base. Akkoma (can't speak about plain pleroma) and Mastodon are similar, but Mastodon has , how to say it, this issue where they spend years shitting on features half the Fediverse have to then add it and pretend they're doing something revolutionary. Also, I don't know why but all the Mastodon servers I've been have had limitations or outright forbid image uploading, telling you to instead open a pixelfed account; I've never seen someone like that even in the crappies key/oma instance. That not even mentioning the toxicity (much of it inherited from twitter during the migrations) that exist in Mastodon.
Piefed like that you can join or abandon communities by topic on piefed and that it ask you if you want to see content with certain topics. Lemmy has the advantage that it has more app options, but it's harder to filter content there and, at least on the server I was, half of the time the search gave no results. Tbh, I think we need a Lemmy fork because that's the only way the community it's ever getting all the user friendly changes it needs. The things that Lemmy lacks it lacks on purpose, there's an active decision to not have them. Different from kbin, I actually like Lemmy, but I agree that PieFed has a lot of potential and as of now haven't had any issues with it.
gon [he]
Als Antwort auf Palladiumasteroid • • •I'm really excited for the future of the Fediverse, with all these apps, but it's just too much...
I'm not advocating for anything, but some of these are definitely gonna get culled.
Scott M. Stolz
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •A marketplace of apps is actually a good thing. Not everyone wants something based on Twitter (i.e. Mastodon, and similar). Not everyone wants Reddit (Lemmy, Mbin, etc.). Not everyone wants a traditional forum (NodeBB). Not everyone wants a blog (WordPress, Hubzilla, etc.). Not everyone wants Facebook (Friendica, Hubzilla, etc.).
One of the goals is to build increased compatibility between apps so that you can choose which experience you want, yet can still talk to anyone else on the fediverse. Some big players will certainly emerge, but I think that there will always be hundreds of compatible apps.
gon [he]
Als Antwort auf Scott M. Stolz • • •Scott M. Stolz
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •gon [he]
Als Antwort auf Scott M. Stolz • • •Well... Is that true, I wonder. Is that what decentralization means?
Software wise, these are open-source projects with strong community contribution. Just a few major players doesn't imply just a few major servers, so no one company or project can ever truly dominate.
Additionally, just the threat of forking could be enough of a deterrent for more authoritarian services not to implement anti-user features. Say Lemmy sells out or something; Lemmy.ml might turn bad, but that means nothing to .world or .ee or any other server. They can just... Not update. Not implement the bad features. Lemmy can just be forked. That's not like Twitter or Facebook.
Right?
I'm not a tech wizz or anything, but that's my understanding of the spiel of the thing of the stuff.
Palladiumasteroid
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •Having a variety of software from where to choose, even within the same type of platform is actually positive.
These software, while similar — but not equal — in terms of UI are completely different in terms of userbase and culture.
Not all former twitter users gave twitter an usage that translates well into Mastodon culture. Instead they could be a better fit for misskey (although this one isn't 100% twitter-like) or pleroma. Or maybe the best for them is something smaller like GTS.
A neurodivergent person that needs to be able to quotepost because they find easy to process information that way is going to have a hard time in Mastodon where are not only now discussing adding the tool, but big part of its userbase reacts negatively to it. Again a Twitter-style fediverse microblogging platform that already has the tool, not only as a feature but ingrained in the culture might be a better fit for them.
Something similar occures with the link aggregators. Yes, they are "Reddit replacements", but they have different cultures, thus they target different kinds of former and in-the-process-of-leaving redditors.
The fediverse is to homogeneous, each particular protocol has its culture that's distinct from all others that make part of the Fediverse; each software using a given protocol has its culture that's distinct from the culture of all other software using the same protocol and each particular instance running a given software has its individual culture that distinguish itself from all other servers running the same software.
Culture and userbase behaviour are just or even more important than the list of features or the UI style when it comes to choose the best place for you on the Fediverse.
The Twitter-style fediverse microblogging platforms are all the same when you just focus on the design aspect and all you have used is Mastodon, but when you take into account culture, the way they behave and interact within themselves and with the wider fediverse...these platforms couldn't be more different from each other.
You say that some are "gonna get culled" but, with exception of projects that were dropped due to personal issues with the devs, but that all somehow live in the form of forks, the Fediverse is expanding and the diversity of platform types is getting greater each day. In fact, there are categories where more diversity of software is needed.
☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •randombullet
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •pixelfed.de/randombullet
I finally have a peaceful place to throw my favorite photos into without being buried under the algorithm.
I've gotten more organic followers here in a few weeks than I ever had on Instagram for 4 years.
Love the community and so many people cheering you on. I'm doing my part by following as many people back and also liking their stuff.
menemen
Als Antwort auf randombullet • • •Just supported the project with a few €. He apparently collected 133.019 CA$. So the immediate future is looking good foglr that project (here aimed for 50.000).
Participations are still open for everyone who wants to support it: kickstarter.com/projects/pixel…
Also don't forget to support the lemmy project!
gon [he]
Als Antwort auf randombullet • • •randombullet
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •gon [he]
Als Antwort auf randombullet • • •https://scribe.disroot.org/u/brunacho
Als Antwort auf gon [he] • • •My entering the fediverse was through Mastodon (also akkoma), then i got into Pixelfed, lemmy, peertube. I regularly use the first three. But mostly mastodon and lemmy, as audiovisual production is not really my thing.
edit: I forgot about bookwyrm! I'm trying to read a lot and I use it to record my readings.