this post was submitted on 12 Jun 2023
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Overall, I'm liking it, but I have some critiques:
For point 1, does this help? https://feddit.uk/post/9352
No, because I'm talking about Universal Links/App Links, the feature of Android and iOS/macOS where you tap/click on an HTTP(S) link to some site, and the link opens & gets handled in the app. The feature was made with centralization in mind, so it won't work with federated servers, especially for users on small servers.
So what I think you're talking about is called deep links, and it's certainly a challenge in this scenario
I'm pretty sure it's solvable with some effort, I'm working on a Lemmy client now and will look into intents that could be sent from the Lemmy front end. My main concern is just recognizing the links in-app robustly as people learn how to format them - if the client doesn't kick you into the browser, it solves half the problem and I'll worry about the other half
4- You signed up for a decentralized service that advertises the lack of a central authority, to leave a central authority, and now you're complaining there's no central authority.
This isn't Reddit, and it's not designed to be a Reddit clone. There are people working on 1 for 1 clones, and it's totally fine if you want that, but maybe you should find one of those instead of demanding the people who built a specific platform with a specific vision immediately ditch all of that to cater to Reddit exiles.
I didn't demand anything; I just made a criticism. There's a difference.
I'm fine with there being no central authority for servers; I just wish there was a central authority for subs, like there is with Usenet, which has no central authority for servers, but it has a central authority for groups carried by the servers. Without one, the user base gets fragmented pretty quickly.
A- I've seen a few community browsers pop up, you can find one in most intro threads and there's also a built in explorer.
B- That's the entire point