Damaniel

joined 1 year ago
[–] Damaniel@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago

Until the instance you choose to set up on ends up in a feud with any, or all of those instances.

The whole fediverse experiment is going to end up with a number of small, highly segregated communities, and even more political polarization. I guess if you want to live in an echo chamber, a federated environment is the best way to go about it.

[–] Damaniel@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

And this is why the fediverse will never work out - if I gamble wrong and set up shop on an instance that gets in a pissing match with other ones, I either have to make an account elsewhere (and then have to do it again later the next time two instances defederate each other) or live with only seeing some of my subscribed content.

 

As a long time developer of games for retro platforms (mainly MS-DOS), I thought it would be cool to have a space where other developers of games and software for retro platforms (computers, consoles and handhelds) could show off their projects, ask questions or get help with their projects. Note that the group mainly focuses on retro hardware - sixth-generation or earlier consoles/handhelds, pre-2000 PCs and computers - though exotic 2000s era hardware is cool too: if you've created a Nuon or Game Park 32 game, we'd love to see it!

If this sounds interesting to you, come check it out! /c/retrogamedev@lemmy.world

lemmy.world/c/retrogamedev

[–] Damaniel@lemmy.world 6 points 1 year ago (2 children)

The platform is fine and being able to subscribe across Lemmy instances is nice (i.e. I'm not even on Beehaw but here I am anyway) - it just needs more users and content.

The main issue is going to be getting that critical mass of users, especially on a platform that isn't quite as straightforward as a centralized one. Trying to explain how Lemmy works to my wife just left her confused and wondering what the point was. Getting people like her to make the jump to a federated platform is going to take time, effort, and - most importantly - content.

[–] Damaniel@lemmy.world 46 points 1 year ago (15 children)

I'm glad to see there's been more of a push for previously '48 hours only' subreddits to move to an indefinite blackout - but I wish that more of them had committed earlier. That leaked internal email shows exactly what I already expected; they just see the protesting Redditors as a bunch of whiny babies who they expect to give up after a couple days and forget the whole thing.