A few weeks ago Lemmy was buggy on computers and there were no good mobile clients out there, now on PC the site is pretty stable and fast, and there are now some pretty good iOS/Android clients too. Thanks to all the people who made this possible!

  • @Mishmash2000@lemmy.nz
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    1001 year ago

    Yeah, it’s amazing how quickly things have improved amid a massive influx of new users! Truly impressive!

  • @blueberry@lemmy.ml
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    431 year ago

    As someone who has been here for quite some time before the reddit exodus, it is crazy how much this place has improved in such a short time. I used to check lemmy once or maybe twice a day and then I’d go back to reddit. Now with all the new people posting here, lemmy has replaced reddit for me

    • Deebster
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      131 year ago

      I joined too early and stopped looking as there was so little content. In fact, when Lemmy started becoming well-known, I forgot I even had an account and made a new one elsewhere. Luckily, my password manager has a better memory!

      • @Serinus@lemmy.ml
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        91 year ago

        Now if only my upvotes would go through. Hopefully the patch that was applied to lemmy.world yesterday addresses that. Their instance seems much more stable and responsive now.

        • Deebster
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          101 year ago

          I think the whole Fediverse is struggling with Reddit and Twitter sending a lot of new users their way.

      • @Schooner@lemmy.ml
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        51 year ago

        Yup, I joined in 2021 too and it was a ghost town. Just seeing hundreds of comments on posts is a shock.

    • Jomn
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      71 year ago

      Yeah, nearly three years ago when I first saw Lemmy I found the idea so cool but I didn’t expect people not interested in fun rust projects to actually come here. And here we are now with an active platform with a wide variety of users !

      • @SirEDCaLot@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        71 year ago

        Lemmy is different than Reddit, and that’s a good thing. I don’t need to replicate Reddit. My problem is just the muscle memory habit of opening a tab and typing in o l d . And hitting enter when it autocompletes

      • @samus12345@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        That’s cool, but sadly the inbox doesn’t work right. You can’t upvote or downvote a comment in it, nor can you see the context to figure out what comment of yours they’re replying to. Hopefully that’s something fixable in the future.

    • EthanolParty
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      141 year ago

      On my phone I’ve put the Jerboa icon where the Rif icon used to be and sure enough I now open Lemmy 100 times a day out of pure habit

    • @iampivot@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I wish there was a simple toggle to make lemmy look like old reddit. Edit: I should have read the reply below first…

  • @fidodo@lemm.ee
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    341 year ago

    Thanks spez! You sent all the best devs making free programs for your platform to your biggest competitor, plus enough users for it to reach critical mass and allow the snowball effect to grow. And it’s FOSS so it can’t be stopped!

  • Xilly
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    291 year ago

    It’s amazing to think it has only been a few weeks and I still find it mind blowing how quickly everyone came together for all these projects.

    • @T156@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Especially for the level of changes that have taken place. Lemmy basically had a major rewrite to move away from web sockets, and Lemmy.world’s operators are running overtime just trying to fix the site up, and make it work for the massive amount of users that they have, addressing a few of the scaling issues in the processing.

  • @GutterPunch@lemmy.world
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    281 year ago

    Developers have been kicking into overdrive to smooth things out. Web UIs are improving in stability under load, and apps like Wefwef are performing great. Each day people participate, donate, bug report, and audit code, is another day that Lemmy improves its rigidity.

  • @henfredemars@infosec.pub
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    241 year ago

    Quite literally by the hour I see app updates come in to pave over issues while at the same time developers are working directly with the big instance owners.

    If that’s not a labor of love for a platform you care about I don’t know what is.

  • @SighBapanada@lemmy.ca
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    231 year ago

    I remember when I’d refresh the front page and see posts from the day before. Now it seems like every few hours there’s new content. This is a really happening place

  • May
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    1 year ago

    Agreed! I’m currently hopping between Liftoff and Connect for my Android client right now, and it’s hard to decide. Both are getting regular updates and they’re just getting better! The race to improve is very exciting.

    Sticking with Connect for the next few days though! Feels very good to use. Lots of customization.

  • Psycadet
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    191 year ago

    As a very new user, not one too tech savvy either, having constant improvements over the short time I’ve been here is so refreshing to see! Still getting my head around some of the navigational aspects, but Wefwef has been a blast to use.

    Thank you Devs, this is truly a labour of love.

  • @wiki_me@lemmy.ml
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    171 year ago

    It just needs horizontal so that you could throw more servers at an instance and improve performance.

    At some point a single community will be so active that one server won’t be enough , it’s better not to split it just so that it will be easier for the software.

    • @rglullis@communick.news
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      191 year ago

      I’d argue the exact opposite. We should strive for more instances and for Lemmy’s userbase to be spread around. The fact that is scaling out (more instances) is easier than scaling up (beefier servers) is a feature, not a bug.

      • @shroomato@lemmy.world
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        91 year ago

        It’s not exactly something that you can force. If X amount of users want to join an instance Y, the instance should be able to provide capabilities to host those users. Besides, horizontal scaling provides other benefits, stability is the main one - if one server instance goes down, others can immediately pick up the slack.

        • @narp@feddit.de
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          71 year ago

          Lemmy.ml did exactly that and is one reason why lemmy.world got to be that big.

          Once the server capacity is reached the instance should be closed and people will just go to another one.

          I don’t understand why people feel so happy about lemmy.world being ahead of the rest. It’s against the point of the fediverse and has risks: the instance can be sold, can make decisions to put advertisement etc. It’s like people didn’t really understand what was wrong with reddit to begin with and how the fediverse tries to be different.

          • @Xanvial
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            71 year ago

            Why not? I don’t see the drawback to develop ability to do horizontal scaling. If the instance owner doesn’t want to add additional servers, it’s up to them. Obviously they paid for it if they decide to add.

            Just to be clear, horizontal scaling means multiple servers handling same instance, it can be the backend service to allow handling more traffics, or multiple db to reduce database loads.

            Additionally it allows high availabilities, so if one of the backend service is down (either unexpectedly or do rolling update) the other service can still active so the instance can still be accessed by users

            • @rglullis@communick.news
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              51 year ago

              Why not?

              • Because it creates an unnecessary incentive re-centralize the social network under a handful of instances
              • Because it leads to drama and power struggles (beehaw defederating from other big instances, claiming issues with moderation)
              • Because after a certain size, there is no real community, no common identity, no shared values and principles.
              • Because it makes the system (the fediverse) more vulnerable.
              • Because it is not sustainable in the long run
              • Because it is not needed. Even if one server has an incredibly popular community, it can be followed from remote instances.
              • @Xanvial
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                1 year ago

                All of your points only considers the community itself, which is not my argument. And that can already achieved by just doing Vertical scaling like most instance currently do, I think even lemmy.world just using 32 core now (google cloud can possibly run with more than 200 vCPU).

                I’m mostly approach this from technical standpoint. It’s impossible to have 100% uptime if there’s no horizontal scaling capability. For example on updating version, currently the instance will need to shut down for maintenance until it’s finished and usually there’s still some issue to fix. If horizontal scaling exist, the instance can update server (or add additional one), move the traffic a bit to test it, and then fully rollout if everything going well.

                • @wiki_me@lemmy.ml
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                  11 year ago

                  Not to mention a hardware failure, which could take a couple of hours to fix at least, some mental health communities should stay online at all time, someone mentioned there is research showing when a person is suicidal there are a couple of hours he is vulnerable, and there is some research showing online support can improve mental health.

                • @rglullis@communick.news
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                  11 year ago

                  All of your points only considers the community itself, which is not my argument. I’m mostly approach this from technical standpoint.

                  I understand. But the point I am trying to make is that makes no sense to worry about technical issues now. Not only it is a premature optimization, it is the kind of metric that is actually damaging to us.

                  What do you prefer? A server that can handle hundreds of thousands of users with 5 nines of uptime, focuses on “Web Scale” and ends up replicating all the issues from Facebook/Twitter/Instagram/Reddit, or an instance that is more aligned with the ideas of the SmolWeb and that is more likely to be a net-positive force in your life?

              • @SneakyWaffles@vlemmy.net
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                41 year ago

                Dude, I think you’re just ignorant of how web hosting works. Every single site you visit is hosted on probably dozens or more servers so that it can load balance or guarantee better uptime. It’s normal. It’s weird to be in a place that is only on one server.

                Being able to host a stable site doesn’t mean everything is suddenly moving into one instance either. The NBA subreddit for example, a single community, has millions of members. Lemmy can’t handle anything like that. And technologically having no way to support large communities is a guaranteed way to kill your app.

                You also seem to be very in favor of spreading out and decentralizing… except for Beehaw. Wonder why you’re such a purist for decentralization except in this case. Weird. Being able to defederate, make moderation decisions for yourself, and making big decisions like that to defend your community is the whole point of these sites. Maybe you should go back to Reddit if you aren’t able to handle it. And for the record, you’d have to be blind to not see moderation controls are lacking at best for this brand new actively being developed site.

                • @rglullis@communick.news
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                  01 year ago

                  Dude, I think you’re just ignorant of how web hosting works.

                  I run a managed hosting service for Mastodon and Lemmy, but yeah…

                  Every single site you visit is hosted on probably dozens or more servers so that it can load balance or guarantee better uptime.

                  Hacker News: one single FreeBSD box. Not even a database.

                  Also, your cargo-cult is showing… talking about “load balance” as a guarantee of uptime is the same as justifying using Mongo because it is webscale

    • @bric@lemm.ee
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      51 year ago

      Lemm.ee has horizontal scaling, and afaik it’s the only lemmy instance to have added it. He has a sticky on meta@lemm.ee that talks about how he’s using a half dozen different servers to split the load, although there’s a few services that can’t be split like image caching, so they just get their own server. I think the changes are being pulled into future updates so hopefully other lemmy instances can start doing the same