Maybe look at figuring out how to host your own instance? I’ve got mine running on a 2 thread, 1gb ram server that’ll cost me less than 10 usd a month. So far it actually seems to run rather smoothly.
Also on a VPS with same specs. Used docker to set it up. The instructions feel like they are not fully fleshed out, especially as someone who never used docker, but it was enough to get it up and running.
Manually adding communities is a little bit tedious. Some overloaded instances make for difficulties. For the last few days it is impossible to subscribe to lemmy.world communities and even the ones I’ve previously subscribed to aren’t federating properly to my local instances. Also I’m unable to subscribe to any kbin magazine, but I don’t know if that is a whitelist or ratelimit issue on kbin.social side.
I did that, have a small instance and now with instances starting to not get along with eachother, it’s actually a nice bonus to be able to just add any community from any server.
Maybe look at figuring out how to host your own instance? I’ve got mine running on a 2 thread, 1gb ram server that’ll cost me less than 10 usd a month. So far it actually seems to run rather smoothly.
Then you get to choose who you federate with.
Cool idea! Might look into that.
Did you use an Ansible role or docker? Is maintaining a manual federation list easy or a pain?
Also on a VPS with same specs. Used docker to set it up. The instructions feel like they are not fully fleshed out, especially as someone who never used docker, but it was enough to get it up and running.
Manually adding communities is a little bit tedious. Some overloaded instances make for difficulties. For the last few days it is impossible to subscribe to lemmy.world communities and even the ones I’ve previously subscribed to aren’t federating properly to my local instances. Also I’m unable to subscribe to any kbin magazine, but I don’t know if that is a whitelist or ratelimit issue on kbin.social side.
Thanks – I’ll try to deploy to a Proxmox container or an ARM64 cloud instance via Ansible. No need for Docker.
I did that, have a small instance and now with instances starting to not get along with eachother, it’s actually a nice bonus to be able to just add any community from any server.