Jonamerica

Senior technology professional with a demonstrated record of cultivating client partnerships and building effective IT strategies.

Mastodon
Jonathan Eggers

  • 4 Posts
  • 11 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 1st, 2023

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  • Yes, that would be nice, although I’m not sure how implementation would work. You need something to anchor the toots to the post. The logical choice is the URL of the post. However, this can be accomplished already with webmention and doesn’t need ActivityPub at all. You have to use something like Bridgy to monitor your account for your domain and then pass them to webmention. Unfortunately, Bridgy can be a little finicky.

    I used to use a WordPress plugin that allowed people to post comments using their social media accounts, but that was just for verification and it wasn’t an integration with social media.


  • My understanding is that followers will only see content from the time they subscribe/follow forward. As Zak mentioned in another comment it’s not that they can’t, but the platforms choose not to. That said, I don’t use the website as my daily fediverse account for a number of reasons. The integrations I use allow for comments, likes, and boosts to be captured, even if they’re not replying to a post from my blog account.

    Also, if someone looks up my blog on Mastodon they get a message saying previous posts can be found on the original site with a link to my author page.






  • My experience has been that the “Hot” view is most similar to Reddit if you’re looking for new content. You can read about the different sorting here: https://join-lemmy.org/docs/en/users/03-votes-and-ranking.html

    What I’ve noticed about the “Active” sort is that older posts that are still getting upvotes and have new comments can remain at/near the top of the list for several days. I think this is good if you want to see where ongoing discussions are happening. On Reddit, I often felt that an interesting post fell off my view very quickly. I know I wasn’t the only one, which is probably why people would post a “remind me” post or “following” post on Reddit so they could come back to it later. Regardless, someone might entirely miss a post that blows up in a community but sees it in the “Active” view and check it out. I like “Hot” because I can see what’s trending up, but I frequently switch between Hot and Active. I’ve noticed that many of the “hot” posts don’t have any comments.

    I agree with you regarding quieter communities. Reddit had something in its sauce that allowed posts from less active communities to show up in my feed through all the noise of busier communities. This didn’t happen for all the subreddits that I joined, but rather, the ones I showed an interest in. The downside of that kind of algorithm is it reinforces the echo chamber effect as the algorithm is learning what I like and then showing me more of what I like to get me to stick around longer. This system isn’t (currently) prone to that kind of manipulation.




  • Kbin and Lemmy are software that you can run on a server to host a public (or private) instance. Kbin is newer and there aren’t a lot of servers hosting it, but I expect it to grow quickly.

    Lemmy is very similar to Reddit where you can post in a community (subreddit) and have threaded comments. You can subscribe to those communities and see the posts in one place.

    Kbin offers this same functionality, and because it works with the fediverse, you can use your Kbin account to join communities on Lemmy servers. In Kbin, these are called threads. Kbin also have a microblogging feature, like Matodon, so you can follow Mastodon users there in a Twitter-like format if you’re interested in that. Lastly, Kbin combines Threads and microblogging into “Magazines” about a specific topic, allowing people to interact in whichever format they like most.


  • You can follow a community in Mastodon, but it treats each comment as a toot, so an active post can flood your stream. It’s not a great integration. I’m watching Kbin with a lot of interest because it combines Reddit-like links with comments (which they call Threads) and Mastodon-like toots (which they call microblogging) into “Magazines,” so you can have both in one place. Right now Kbin doesn’t have as many servers as Lemmy and the main server (Kbin.social) is getting hammered, so it’s difficult to use.


  • You can’t, but there’s no need. You can read posts to communities on other Lemmy servers from your account on lemmy.ml. You can subscribe to those communities and comment on posts there as well. There’s no need to have an account on each server. It’s like email. You don’t need an email address on each server to send/receive email. There may be a reason to have another account - maybe you get really involved in a community on that server and that server feels more like home. But, no, there is no protocol for cross-authentication.