this post was submitted on 07 Jun 2023
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Asklemmy
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It's generally ok. Though its tougher to use than reddit. To be honest I really wish that it did a better job of merging similar communities or something like that?
Like almost like a multi-reddit of cats to include all cats communities with dedups.. similar idea for other categories.
To be fair, Reddit doesn't merge similar communities either. You could have /r/cats, /r/catpics, /r/cat_pics, /r/PicturesOfCats, and so on. The point is, Reddit also needed time to establish popular communities before they took hold. I think it's less a structural issue with Lemmy and more just a small forum problem. In time it should self correct so that when you look up "cats" on Lemmy, the overwhelmingly most popular community pops up and you can subscribe to it. The one downside is that you could have multiple /c/cats communities on different instances, but that still won't be that big of a problem. The most popular one will still be the first search result and it won't be too hard to remember that it's the Beehaw cats community that's the popular one (not literally - just to use a random example instance).
Communities may be similar in name but the users that belong to them probably would make the community have a different vibe. I quite like the idea of signing up to two science communities from Beehaw and ml, and eventually I can opt out if one misbehaves or produces uninteresting or irrelevant content to me.