My introduction to these platforms was through the android app. However I was lurking the last couple days and today the app broke so I decided to go to an instance directly.
I came to realize something was different when I stumbled upon a thread from <instance>/195 talking about how they changed their name because 196 on <instance> became more popular.
So my first question which I basically just want affirmation for is that every instance can have it’s own communities that share the same name. But are other instances of the same community shared in a feed or do I have to search out each one individually?
Secondly usernames. Since I signed up with the same nick on multiple platforms I assume it’s like an email system with Kritical@<instance>
However, do I have to register to every instance I wish to comment on or as long as they are sharing resources I should be able to post?
Literally my first post so I’m sure I could figure this out on my own but figure asking these questions may help others transitioning with the same questions.
Big fan of the platform. Fuck reddit and fuck /u/spez. This is what I’m looking for in a link aggregator.
So my first question which I basically just want affirmation for is that every instance can have it’s own communities that share the same name. But are other instances of the same community shared in a feed or do I have to search out each one individually?
You have to search them out individually FOR NOW, issue tracker to resolve that here: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy-ui/issues/1113
Secondly usernames. Since I signed up with the same nick on multiple platforms I assume it’s like an email system with Kritical@<instance>
Yes, exactly, and if you’re on the same instance as somebody else you won’t see their instance in their username.
However, do I have to register to every instance I wish to comment on or as long as they are sharing resources I should be able to post?
They’re sharing resources, that’s what federation is, the ability for all of the instances to communicate as though it’s a seamless experience.