recursive_recursion [they/them]

P.D Volunteer Community Team Lead.
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  • 1 Post
  • 32 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 15th, 2023

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  • A barchart might be better as the comparison of instances with the most subscribed accounts doesn’t mean much I feel

    we have some users that register but are inactive and/or are infrequently active which could be a sign of lurkers or bots but empty accounts don’t mean much when it comes to the health of an instance.

    However; if we look at each community’s active monthly and daily users it can tell another story and that data compared against Reddit’s could be useful for anyone seeking alternatives

    I’m rambling with little sleep but hopefully what I’ve said make a little bit of sense


  • that is true but for beginners with a $1000 budget who ask about buying laptops to host services

    • I’d usually steer towards pc building as buying a laptop would usually be the worst of all options (which brings me great pain for my customers)
      • and building an actual server can be costly unless you’re buying easily accessible second -hand/used components

    one thing I forgot to mention is that it also heavily depends on an individual’s use cases, restrictions, and preferences


  • that is definitely true however the added benefit is typically a longer warranty range as buying a laptop would typically mean that all components would be sold under a single flat warranty cycle/deadline

    plus even if your computer is borked, you can still take it into a microcenter, memoryexpress, brick-and-mortor retailer to have their technicians figure it out the problem for a cost

    I often have these time vs cost tradeoff discussions with my customers after they’ve been informed on the basics


  • with a $1000 budget they might want to consider building a computer as desktops usually provide better performance/per cost rather than buying a $1000 laptop

    • desktop pcs can also be small if a small form-factor like ITX or mini-ITX is chosen (although mini-ITX can be pricey)

    building is incredibly easy as there’s a plethora of tutorial vids online and you’re less likely to get screwed over by an Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) or retailer

    • diy vs. buying a pre-built

    the fediverse here also has an active community for support !buildapc@lemmy.world










  • as one of the instance mod/admin’s I’d say that evidence would help expedite the report process but it’s totally optional

    depending on what the thing being reported is sometimes evidence isn’t needed

    • for anything that’s blatantly negative/unpleasant, evidence isn’t typically needed when reporting a post/comment

    • for anything else that someone might find subtly “off”, 2 pieces of evidence could help us figure out what’s wrong

      • as a systems analyst having as much information to determine what happened and how things got to this way can help others and myself determine what the best way forward could be
      • for example some users might just need a warning/clarification based on my own interactions

  • By chance the fediverse might’ve developed a resilient antibody and regeneration system:

    due to allowing federated communities with transparent moderation logging it means that users are free to choose from a plethora of instances to set up camp and create

    back on reddit it wasn’t possible as there was only one without connections so it acted like a walled garden but now with the spread of Activitypub, it might be difficult for a singular company to have full control unless they’re able to offer better services than what’s currently available

    just a guess but I’d reckon that at minimum 51% of users that care about privacy and security would choose a FOSS instance rather than a closed-source proprietary one

    and as time passes I’d imagine that capitalistic instances would decay over time due to insufficient funding and/or user retention as their primary goal would be to squeeze their users which isn’t a sustainable model




  • There’s a couple things I’ve noticed while using Lemmy and Mastodon:

    Admins and moderators have a sort of distributed power as it’s somewhat no longer consolidated to a single instance like Reddit anymore,

    • and so there’s more incentive to making good decisions for not only for oneself but for the collective (reason being long-term instance sustainability)
      • therefore this system is likely to incentivize admins and moderators to make better long-term decisions rather than chasing short-term goals.
      • anytime I see systems that encourages people to make better long term decisions that makes me happy :D

    additionally the fediverse gives more leeway to user choice as you’re no longer locked down to an instance

    • (this of course changes based on the instance federation/defederation situation which stems from the instance admin’s/admins’ past and current actions.)
    • this allows users to participate on multiple communities using one account instead of having to create multiple accs

    the emergent complexity of the systems that builds the fediverse seems like it’s currently on a good path for building sustainable homely communities, so I’m cautiously optimistic

    so far there’s areas I can see that could use some QOL improvement for online discussions boards/forums and Lemmy’s current systems seems like a good point to branch out from