Lemmy.world finally updated to v19 and I see that I have the option to do scaled sort. Typically I sort by “Top 6 hour”, “Top 12 hours”, and then “Active”.

None of these options are really like the old “Hot” sort on Reddit. So how does the scaled sort work? Is anyone who has been on v19 a while using it much?

16 points

I believe it’s to help raise up tiny communities. So a community with ten members that has a new post with one upvote should be scaled to the same as a huge community with a post with hundreds of upvotes.

This is to combat a few huge communities dominating the front page, when some smaller communities may be trying to take off.

permalink
report
reply
9 points

That sounds really smart.

permalink
report
parent
reply

It is, and it’s my default sort option. I find it gives a pretty good feed of things I follow and things I might want to check out.

permalink
report
parent
reply
7 points

That makes a lot of sense, especially for sorting the all and local feeds. Sounds like that’s probably a good method of sorting things. Although that begs the question, what does the Lemmy “hot” sort do then…

permalink
report
parent
reply
9 points

I know that I could easily google the answer but I wanted to give this community so more traffic. From join-lemmy,

There is a new scaled sort which takes into account the number of active users in a community, and boosts posts from less-active communities to the top. Additionally there is a new controversial sort which brings posts and comments to the top that have similar amounts of upvotes and downvotes. Lemmy’s sorts are detailed here.

So it sounds like it is more like the rising sort on Reddit?

permalink
report
reply
6 points

I would say Lemmy’s “Hot” sort is closest to Reddit’s “Rising”.

“Active” seems like Reddit’s “Hot” equivalent but a little lamer because it brings forward days-old posts too…

permalink
report
parent
reply

!? Out of the loop.. ?

!outoftheloop@lemmy.ca

Create post

If you are confused by a post, comment or meme in the lemmyverse… post here to ask for an explanation. Hopefully someone will explain :)

Rules:

  • Good-faith questions and answers only. No Spam, Trolling, Sea-lioning or Agitprop.

  • No shaming or abuse of questioners. We’re ALL ‘out of the loop’ on lots of things…

  • The purpose of this community is to inform others who are confused by some topic, event, or the use of lingo that the general public may not be aware of.

  • Abusive, hostile or otherwise disruptive language will NOT be tolerated. Mods discretion is absolute and violators will be banned.

Community stats

  • 1

    Monthly active users

  • 3

    Posts

  • 42

    Comments

Community moderators