Yes, you can create your account on this instance.
No, we won't be mad if you choose a different one.
Technical issues are likely, so please be patient.
This is new to all of us, and we're learning as we go, but please leave any questions you have in the comments, and we'll see about providing some answers.
When I use startrek.website as my instance I get different search results than if I log into a different instance.
From what I can gather this is because startrek.website has yet to be federated with lots of other instances.
I think I should be able to connect to other instances and communities through the search but nothing happens if I put the address in the search in the way it says in the documentation.
Since today I do get some search results from lemmy.world, beehaw.org and lemmy.ml I think.
Is it just a matter of waiting for it all to propagate and connect or am I doing something wrong? I'm using jerboa on android.
We're still learning the ins and outs of Federation, but I think it's mostly just a matter of waiting. Here's what the official documentation has to say about it:
If you search for a community first time, 20 posts are fetched initially. Only if a least one user on your instance subscribes to the remote community, will the community send updates to your instance.
So Federation should continue to improve over time.
Thanks, I really like the whole idea of Lemmy and this instance. it's quite exciting being present for the start of it all. It took a while for it to compute in my brain but I'm getting there.
If you’re interested in a little more behind the scenes info on how this works, (and since I want to make a test post to see how it shows up in Lemmy):
Since there’s no central clearinghouse for content in the distributed Fediverse, each instance broadcasts its users’ new posts, but only to other instances that need to see that content, generally because they host at least one user interested in it.
So you’ll see times when your instance won’t have received any older content before its first user followed the remote account. After that, the remote instance knows to start sending content to your instance, to that user really, but then your instance knows about the content.
In other words, your instance begins its subscription to the remote account by having any user begin to follow it.
Okay. I've learned a little bit, enough to ask questions. Where should I go to post my questions/thread about waves hand all this? At this point, my questions are very ELI5, with answers (hopefully) in the form of tiny, manageable bites, not walls of text. So far, I know I signed up for and can post on a Community, Star Trek specifically, LLAP. And, that the Fediverse is not a new name for the United Federation of Planets. And ... yeah, that's about it.
Thanks. I just hit the wrong button and lost my reply to you. Shaka, when the walls fell. Giving it another go.
I'm deciphering an image whose original post I've lost in a sea of Lemmy links I've been reading and bookmarking. Image link is below. So, Lemmy is an umbrella for instances (servers), which in turn can host (I'm not sure if host is the right term) other instances? Is Star Trek an instance like a mini-reddit, or an, I don't know what to call them, an instance like a subreddit within the mini-reddit?
Thanks for this link in an easy to find post. I came here from r/startrek, and I don't know enough about Lemmy to even ask a question. I'm not even sure what Lemmy is, lol. But, I know that I can post or lurk amongst other Star Trek fans. That's enough for now. The rest is on a learning curve, but not particularly techy me seems to be finding my way around.
The official lemmy documentation isn't very user-friendly I believe!
No need to get into how the fediverse works for now - suffice to say there are a bunch of other servers with existing communities set up, and you can connect to them from here with your startrek.website account.
Searching them from this website is a tiny bit tricky - if you're the first person here to search for it, it won't show up because that server hasn't connected to this server.
If you're the first person to connect, the subscriber stats are all wrong (and some posts may not load). Subscribe and give it 10-15 minutes and refresh. I've seen subs jump from 6 subscribers and 0 comments on every post, to 300+ subscribers and 20+ comments on each post.
Once you subscribe, other people can find the community more easily on the "All" page here. So you're getting more content, AND you're helping others find more communities!
Here's a few I like:
startrek.website/c/[email protected] > to see what new communities others have created
I have a couple of new questions. I wasn't sure if I should start a new post, or risk being a necromancer and resurrect this post. I'm going with necromancer. It'll be something cool to add if I ever write my memoir. Unless it's against the rules, in which case, sorry about this.
My questions: why do some folks here have an @ before their usernames? And, why don't I have an @ before my username? Background: I haven't signed up for anything in the Fediverse or Mastodon except for startrek.website.
Second question: how do I format an @ with the username in a comment or post in order to notify that person. I've learned that replying to someone's comment or post alerts them.
It does seem a weird choice. Having the user's default be "Undetermined" makes sense, but having that selectable as a choice when entering kind of doesn't. And an "All" dropdown would make more sense for searching rather than having "Undetermined" along with all the other choices.
This is horrible, you only see 8 posts on a "sub reddit's" main page with a 4k desktop (it's 16 on reddit) It's only using half the width of the screen. This is clearly visually geared for mobile with like zero concern for desktop users. This is not somewhere I'll visit everyday like I did on reddit
I mean it hasn't even been a day. Give it some time to change, customize, re-org, etc. before making scathing opinions.
Frankly it's going to take some getting used to, but reddit also took some getting used to back when I went from forums to Reddit back in the day.
Not to mention the creation of browser plugins and apps once people really get active in this community. Reddit was over 15 years old and had loyal users, this is like a day old, it's going to be a bit rough around the edges.