Does The Instance You Pick Matter?

Mostly it doesn’t matter for the person using it*, so you can just pick one that isn’t overloaded to start. But…

Ways it does matter:

* Your instance’s moderation policy and actions. (including what content is allowed/disallowed, how they deal with harassment, etc.)
* Server reliability. This can change drastically if a lot of people join at once, as many Lemmy sites have discovered this week! (I believe Lemmy.ml and Lemmy.world have both upgraded their hardware in the last few days to deal with this!)
* Admin reliability. This is harder to tell up front, but it’s worth taking a quick look at whether the admins seem to be active and responsive, whether they seem like they’re in it for the long haul or if they’re experimenting, etc.
* Aaaand I just read about the situation with Beehaw.org defederating from lemmy.world because their mods were overwhelmed, so that (for now) the two servers can’t interact with each other.

Switching is sort of easy in that all you have to do is create a new account somewhere, and you don’t need to tell your followers because Lemmy doesn’t have user subscriptions (though someone could follow you from, say, Mastodon)…

…but it’s also not easy in that Lemmy doesn’t have tools to export/import your subscriptions (yet?) so you have to add them to the new account manually. And moving your posting/comment history isn’t something that’s doable at the moment, either.

What I did when moving from lemmy.ml to lemmy.world was put the old/new accounts in each others’ bios and add “Old Account” to the old one’s display name. I’m not too attached to my post history sticking to my profile.

*I think it matters a bit more for where you set up a community, on the basis that an instance focused around, say, history would be a better place to create an archaeology community than one focused around FOSS. Though you might want to cross-post articles about free software used in archaeology!

[Discussion thread deleted]

Part of the promise of #ActivityPub and the #Fediverse is that you can interact not just with different servers, but differen…

Part of the promise of #ActivityPub and the #Fediverse is that you can interact not just with different servers, but different kinds of servers. I’ve been testing how well different platforms interact, reported some bugs, and even fixed a couple of them.

Not surprisingly, I’ve found that the bigger projects have good #interoperability with each other, smaller projects have good interoperability with Mastodon, and smaller projects are more likely to have bugs in interoperability with each other. Sometimes you can view someone’s posts or profiles on another platform, but following them doesn’t work, and replies don’t make it back. Or only some kinds of posts are visible.

Does anyone have a #compatibility matrix I can contribute to, or should I just post my notes somewhere? @fediversenews

#

Side project: improve Fediverse interoperability

I’ve made it a side project to improve #Fediverse #interoperability. Currently:

Using multiple platforms of different types:

  • @Mastodon (microblogging/general)
  • @bookwyrm (book reviews and library tracking)
  • @LemmyDev (link sharing/discussion forum)
  • @pixelfed (photos)
  • WordPress+ActivityPub plugin (blogging)

Testing other platforms that fit the same niche as Mastodon:

Finding what does and doesn’t work between them.

Reporting bugs and testcases.

So far it’s been mostly haphazard. I need to start tracking what I have and haven’t tested.

And I’d like to make time to fix some bugs and maybe implement some features too — I just need to carve out the time to dig into some code!

#

I know there are more ActivityPub platforms out there, and I’m sure I’ll try out more of them as time goes on.

For now, though, I don’t want to spread myself too thin on the general platforms, and I don’t have a good personal use case for, say, Funkwhale or Peertube that will make sure I actually keep using it!

#

Is there a general #federation #compatibility matrix somewhere? I would have thought FediDB or SocialHub would be the place to look, but I don’t see anything of the sort on either site.

#

Great, I’m already thinking about setting up a Codeberg repo with just issues and docs linking to each projects’ federation-tagged issues.

C’mon, brain, save it for after work.

Realized that my tinkering with #GoToSocial, #Takahe, #CalcKey and #Snac2, continuing to use #Pixelfed, #Lemmy …

Realized that my tinkering with #GoToSocial, #Takahe, #CalcKey and #Snac2, continuing to use #Pixelfed, #Lemmy and #Bookwyrm, and looking for compatibility problems are part of the same impulse that had me trying out every web browser I could find in the early 2000s and deliberately using Firefox and Opera on Linux as my daily drivers instead of IE on Windows.

It's a drop in the ocean, but it's my push for interoperability over #monoculture.

#Fediverse #BrowserWars

On Wandering.shop

Fediverse single-user software testing so far: Mastodon (deactivated) – about what I expected, same as being on another serv…

Fediverse single-user software testing so far:

Mastodon (deactivated) – about what I expected, same as being on another server except it’s faster, quieter, and needs a bigger VPS that feels justified.

GoToSocial (here!) – I like the simplicity of it, and it works great with Pinafore. Going to have to test out Elk or something as a backup. However, it’s early in development and a lot of features aren’t implemented yet.

Calckey ( @kelsonv )- Complete, but also kind of overwhelming.

Snac2 ( @kelsonv@snac.hyperborea.org ) – Extremely bare-bones. Like web 1.0 style. But still talks to the Fediverse!

The big problem I’ve been running into is that while they all seem to interact well with Mastodon, they don’t interact well with other platforms like Pixelfed, or Bookwyrm, or Lemmy, or even each other. So none of them are at the point where I can use it as my main window on the Fediverse, unless I go back and build a new solo Mastodon server.

Question for the makers of various #fediverse platforms (but especially the two I'm currently …

Question for the makers of various #fediverse platforms (but especially the two I'm currently testing: @gotosocial and @calckey )

Is there an equivalent to Mastodon's self-destruct command for decommissioning a server cleanly and letting federated instances know that it's going away?

Wondering about it in the context of this thread:
https://old.mermaid.town/@futzle/109678669657135324
which got me thinking about my own testing.

On Wandering.shop