I am new and trying to understand how Lemmy works. I am posting this from my lemmy.world account, on a lemmy.ml community. It seems like you can read, post, subscribe to whatever community outside of the instance you’re registered with. So… Why register on lemmy.world vs lemmy.ml or any other instance, if all communities are accessible to everyone?

  • TeaHands@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I guess if you like to actually visit each community and look at their latest threads from there it could be an issue, this is presumably what the feature request for “multi-communities” is all about where in theory we could group them all together for our viewing pleasure.

    I do think certain communities will become the “main” ones for each topic though over time, we just have to try and make sure they’re spread around and not all just on lemmy.ml.

    There’s a similar thing going on with gamedev communities, I’m subbed to at least 4 or 5 at this point. But in reality nobody was posting much to any so I just picked one at random to post in and kickstarted some convos, now it’s the only one that seems to see any action. But since I’m subbed to all of them, if one of the others does suddenly kick off, I’ll see it in my feed anyway and won’t miss out so having four of them doesn’t really seem like an issue.

    • foxtrot@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      I don’t think I’ll be visiting each community to look at each thread, but in my experience on Reddit, once you’re subscribed to a certain number of communities you won’t be able to see them all in your feed, so that’s why I wonder :) Though I guess Reddit has some kind of interest algorithm to show you stuff, as I noticed that if I visited a subreddit directly it would then start coming up in my feed more often - I wonder if Lemmy would have the same kind of thing - the more you interact with a community the more likely it is to come up on your subscribed feed.