I am also following a specific community here on RSS. Nice to go through my articles and see someone asking for technical help / advice – or simply sharing something cool.
Seasoned Network operator & hobbyist Sysadmin. Dog dad. Beer lover. Aspiring Greybeard. Strong believer in community action.
Mastodon: @kazaii@noc.social
Blog: zealnetworks.ca
I am also following a specific community here on RSS. Nice to go through my articles and see someone asking for technical help / advice – or simply sharing something cool.
Ah, maybe it was just slow to load and I rushed to delete it. Either way, I’m glad I did…
Good idea on the throwaway. It’s time to rip off the band-aid.
It stopped working for me after midnight and they put a banner explaining it in the bottom right. RIP to many good commutes browsing random info in my various subreddits.
Great question, great read. Thanks for posting this.
Desktop/Workstation = Arch
Servers: Ubuntu
I’m also tech support for my wife’s laptop running Kubuntu.
I’d say they’re comparable and have similar problems experienced in different ways.
On mastodon, a big name becomes the stress on the server. It’s like people showing up to a small coffee shop to hear a politician speak about something. If the politician becomes more renowned / popular, eventually they have rallies. Eventually those rallies are broadcasted and licestreamed… All that means more infra and more $
Lemmy has the problem of communities. Communities sometimes gather in small places like a person’s house or a bar. If that community grows large, maybe they need to have a conference / convention (like an anime or tech community). That means the instance that hosts that community has to has a conference sized instance, to host all the lads/lasses/etc of the fediverse.
More eyeballs / more discussion = more demand. Simple as that.
edit: I will add that there is one difference. You might have your own little small fragmented community, here on sh.itjust … like for skateboards. More intimate discussion, etc. This would potentially prevent c/skateboards on an instance from growing too large…
But there is only one @gargron that most people will follow.