Hmm, seems like the way to conform with this - is to post clear instructions on how to open a lemmy account and access the relevant community here instead - then the community will really belong to themselves, right?
(If a move to lemmy is going to work, we need to make sure that clear instructions are provided, and there is an easy map of existing subreddits over to new lemmy communities/channels.
Eh, I’m old and been using PCs since the Commodore 64, but i don’t work in tech or read tech outside of military comms type stuff. Granted im stubborn and have ethical considerations of social media that kept me of FB/Twitter so I may have had a bit more incentives to figure it out.
I just googled lemmy, made an account in ~5 minutes though the first signup didn’t go through my second one did, and I’ve been making a point to comment and interact because
FUCK REDDIT. They pissed me off, and I think it will be important to have open communication before the next us elections. Elons already locked down Twitter, we’ve seen how much Zuck slobbered over Trumps non in 2016&2020
Anyway, sorry got distractedI think the best way to tell people about is just get them to sign up on one and play around a bit. There is a lot of support in the forums for non techies like me. Still trying to recreate the old Reddit look on my iOS, but im doing fine with the default web layout until I do.
I think the only thing that’s really missing is the whole subscribing to another instances sublemmies. Clicking a link here and being taken to another server and told to log in on a site for which we have no login as our Achilles heel at the moment.
But it’s not that unlike going to new subreddits on Reddit used to be where you had to know /r/whatever now it’s /c/whatever@kbin.social
Saw a link to lemmy.world on reddit, went to it, clicked ‘sign up’, filled in my info and waited for an email. I don’t get why people think it’s difficult. It’s literally the same as any other website. Reddit’s astroturfing hard on how ‘hard’ lemmy is to use.
Once you’ve chosen an instance, yeah, it’s dead simple.
I think the emphasis on users choosing the instances that best fits them, and discouraging people from going onto larger instances is where all the confusion comes from. Add to this the fact that there’s no way (yet?) to migrate between instances (without starting over again as a new user) puts a whole lot of pressure onto prospective new users.
Hmm, seems like the way to conform with this - is to post clear instructions on how to open a lemmy account and access the relevant community here instead - then the community will really belong to themselves, right?
(If a move to lemmy is going to work, we need to make sure that clear instructions are provided, and there is an easy map of existing subreddits over to new lemmy communities/channels.
deleted by creator
Eh, I’m old and been using PCs since the Commodore 64, but i don’t work in tech or read tech outside of military comms type stuff. Granted im stubborn and have ethical considerations of social media that kept me of FB/Twitter so I may have had a bit more incentives to figure it out.
I just googled lemmy, made an account in ~5 minutes though the first signup didn’t go through my second one did, and I’ve been making a point to comment and interact because
FUCK REDDIT. They pissed me off, and I think it will be important to have open communication before the next us elections. Elons already locked down Twitter, we’ve seen how much Zuck slobbered over Trumps non in 2016&2020
Anyway, sorry got distractedI think the best way to tell people about is just get them to sign up on one and play around a bit. There is a lot of support in the forums for non techies like me. Still trying to recreate the old Reddit look on my iOS, but im doing fine with the default web layout until I do.
I made an account, like, 15 minutes ago and it’s not too difficult. But yeah, a simple guide would’ve been really nice
I think the only thing that’s really missing is the whole subscribing to another instances sublemmies. Clicking a link here and being taken to another server and told to log in on a site for which we have no login as our Achilles heel at the moment.
But it’s not that unlike going to new subreddits on Reddit used to be where you had to know /r/whatever now it’s /c/whatever@kbin.social
Think there just needs to a YouTuber or something that makes a “Lemmy in 100 seconds” guide.
Saw a link to lemmy.world on reddit, went to it, clicked ‘sign up’, filled in my info and waited for an email. I don’t get why people think it’s difficult. It’s literally the same as any other website. Reddit’s astroturfing hard on how ‘hard’ lemmy is to use.
Once you’ve chosen an instance, yeah, it’s dead simple.
I think the emphasis on users choosing the instances that best fits them, and discouraging people from going onto larger instances is where all the confusion comes from. Add to this the fact that there’s no way (yet?) to migrate between instances (without starting over again as a new user) puts a whole lot of pressure onto prospective new users.