Community Search Tips

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This community is dedicated to helping Lemmy and kbin users find communities and magazines to participate in.

Post your questions, requests, and tips in this community. All discussion is good! The more we share about what's out there, the better the Lemmy experience will be for everyone.

Note: Please avoid using the shorthand link (links that begin with !) when linking to communities. That method can result in an error in small instances. Details here.

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Community Spotlight: ntfy (discuss.ntfy.sh)
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by RotaryKeyboard@lemmy.ninja to c/communitysearchtips@lemmy.ninja
 
 

Those of you who are sysadmins or who run your own homelabs may be interested in this new community: !ntfy@discuss.ntfy.sh. It's the new home of Reddit's r/ntfy. It's a community that supports the ntfy tool.

From ntfy.sh's site:

ntfy (pronounced notify) is a simple HTTP-based pub-sub notification service. It allows you to send notifications to your phone or desktop via scripts from any computer, and/or using a REST API. It's infinitely flexible, and 100% free software.

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Lemmy.ml has performed a server update that appears to have fixed the issue where subscriptions to communities on Lemmy.ml showed "subscribe pending" instead of "subscribed."

To fix your subscription, just unsubscribe from the community and subscribe again.

edit: As of 2023-06-23, the problem is back again. If you see "Subscribe Pending," just know that you can still participate in the community. It's just a display bug.

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Last week, Beehaw.org announced that they are de-federating themselves from Lemmy.world and sh.itjust.works. All three of those Lemmy instances are big, with dozens of very active, popular communities. So how does that impact you as a Lemmy user?

When Beehaw.org says they are "de-federating" with Lemmy.world and sh.itjust.works, what they mean is that they've blocked Lemmy.world and sh.itjust.works from participating in communities on beehaw.org. That means that users who registered accounts at lemmy.world and sh.itjust.works won't be able to participate on any communities at beehaw.

If you're a user who registered at a different Lemmy instance, such as our own Lemmy.ninja, you won't be affected. You will still be able to participate in communities from all three of those instances.

There's another impact, however. Sh.itjust.works and (especially) Lemmy.world are sites with a large number of users. By defederating, Beehaw has eliminated a large number of users from participating in their communities. That means that the communities at Beehaw will become less active, and competing communities on other instances may start to grow.

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cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/171497

Sub.Rehab lists relocated Subreddits' new homes in the Fediverse or other platforms

[Ed. Note: if you see that a subreddit you want to follow is on kbin.social, don't fret. You can still subscribe to kbin "magazines" directly from lemmy.ninja. You will find details on how to do this in our New User FAQ.

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Today we learned about Lemmy Explorer, a Lemmy instance and community search tool. It uses a crawler to collect information from Lemmy Fediverse servers, scanning each server once every 12 hours. With this tool you can sort your searches by more criteria than the community search at feddit.de:

  • Subscriber Count
  • Active User Count
  • Post Count
  • Comment Count

The default sorting method is called "Smart Sort," which we haven't been able to find documentation about yet.

A quick search for an Apple community yields strange results. !apple@lemmy.ml shows up first when sorted by posts, but !selfsovereignid@exploding-heads.com is the second search result, which merely mentions Apple Wallet in their sidebar and has nothing to do with Apple. Sixth on the list is !destiny@lemmy.world, which doesn't even mention Apple anywhere -- sidebar or otherwise.

Right now it looks like this is another way to see Lemmy servers and communities, but probably not the best method to compare them to each other and find the right community for you. For now let's call it another arrow in the quiver, but not the best search tool.

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Our friends at feddit.de have created a live search tool for Lemmy communities! Type in your search term and the community browser will show you a list of communities sorted by total number of posts (descending). This will help ensure that you pick the most active variant of a particular community.

The search results will give you three major blocks of information.

  1. The direct URL and a copy URL button. Use this URL in the community search box.
  2. The name of the community. You can click this to read the community sidebar and see if the community is right for you.
  3. Vital statistics (instance URL, post, comment, and subscriber counts).

So far it doesn't look like it will show you any kbin magazines (what kbin calls a community). Rest assured you can still search for and find kbin magazines the old fashioned way -- just not with browse.feddit.de.

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Asif Youssuff assembled this short list of subreddits and corresponding kbin or Lemmy communities that have sprung up to replace them. It's organized into subscriber count buckets, making it easier to evaluate whether the replacement community is active enough for your subscription.

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Lemmy is a federated news aggregator, which means that most of the posts and communities that have the most activity don't reside on this server. At Lemmy.ninja, we do a lot of work trying to find those remote communities and make them easy for you to find and subscribe to.

If you're looking for a community, head to our community list and click on "all." When we find a good, active remote community, we make sure to subscribe to it so that it appears there. This list will continually grow!

edit: Well, in the intervening days since this post, we've changed from an allow-list approach to a block-list approach when it comes to federating with other communities. Doing this had an unexpected impact on our community list -- it started auto-populating. That means that it's slowly filling with communities that we haven't curated. That's okay, though; as we grow, you can use the subscriber counts on the community list to get an idea of what is popular across all of the Lemmy and kbin communities!

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If you're new to Lemmy, it can be hard to find communities to subscribe to. Unlike monolithic sites like Reddit, federated sites require you to discover the communities (and the sites they reside on) yourself.

Here at lemmy.ninja, we've found a lot of good communities that you can access from the communities section of this server. To find more, I decided to plumb one of the largest Lemmy sites, lemmy.ml, to see what its users are subscribed to. I took the top 2000 sites listed at lemmy.ml and sorted them according to the number of posts in the community. Check out the full list here.

Keep in mind that the list heavily favors communities on lemmy.ml, but it's a start!