I honestly do not mind it one but. I quite like the interface. It’s minimal but there are some bugs to it which is to be expected. I really do like the overall design of it though. There isn’t too much going on. It’s like old Reddit which I am a big fan of

  • sambeastie@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I understand how federation works, and Lemmy’s UI seems more or less fine, but I guess I’m still not quite sold on federation in this style being the answer for Reddit-like functionality. It’s a bit awkward, and unlike how Twitter’s functionality is quite easily mimicked by Mastodon, I’m still kind of skeptical that following subreddit equivalents in that fashion maps quite as cleanly.

    I’m not sure how I would do it differently, but I get the sense that there is a better way to have a decentralized Reddit-like experience, and probably one that avoids the risks of the current method (downtime, discoverability, scaling costs for the largest instances, etc).

    I’ll stick around the fediverse for now, but I really get the sense that it was built for a Twitter or maybe Tumblr like experience, and the Reddit-like experience will always feel a bit short of ideal.

    • oyenyaaow@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      Hardcore tumblr still pines for Livejournal, and honestly i still do to. Dreamwidth for a time until the censorship from advertisors came for it too (it was tracked to a single payment processing company that opposes ‘immorality’ end up periodical deleting of entire swathes of journals, seriously why), but before everyone settles on tumblr i remember half a dozen or more sites.

      This (the comments system) do feel like Livejournal, minus the massive css theme customisation it used to have.