Very difficult to discuss with the fiance without know the terminology yet lol

81 points

They’re communities. And the different servers/sites are instances.

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21 points

Petition to name them SubLemmys

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40 points

I like communities, honestly, it sounds much less… y’know, reddity?

And also, it’s much more intuitive.

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5 points

Personally that term makes me a bit uneasy. To me it sounds too grandiose and organized just for something that might just be some random people shitposting or chatting about their interests. And actually having tight knit communities can easily lead to all kinds of negative effects, group think, hierarchies and drama.

Of course some subreddits, forums, lemmy communities etc can be actual communities but just as a personal preference I don’t like the idea of calling them that default.

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2 points
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I think “sub” is what people are going to call them reguardless. It is just internet language at this point, a subdivision of a community (by community I mean lemmy as a whole) is called a sub. Weather it’s a subreddit or sublemmy. I’m not saying bring reddit with us, I am just saying the internet can take the term “sub” with it and use it elsewhere.

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6 points

Instances also need better names.

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6 points

Why not “servers”? That’s all they are. They serve content.

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4 points

What would you call gmail vs hotmail?

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6 points
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Sublemminals? (or Sublemmynals)

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1 point

Love it 😂

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0 points

new to lemmy…

if there different “linux” communities on different instances? does this mean i have to subscribe to all of them? is there a way to see all content from communities called “linux” from different instances?

or does each “linux” community simply fight for critical mass to become the “main” linux community on lemmy?

thanks

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1 point

There could be different linux communities on different instances, and to see them all you’d have to subscribe to them and sort by subscribed view. But yeah, in practice most of the time there will emerge one “main” linux community and, if it gets big enough, likely offshoot communities for different philosophies or more specificity.

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2 points

A “merge identical” option in the individual users’ ui would be kind of neat, to have one page.

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74 points

Sub-Lemminal messages?

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10 points

that’s brilliant actually for a mobile app name

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7 points

I like this one

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66 points

Communities, which have a parent instance.

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62 points

I just thought they were called “communities”. At least, that’s what the Lemmy UI shows.

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9 points

So “coms” for short?

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17 points

Commies

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@lemmy.ml
2 points

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1 point

⚒️✊

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1 point

🔨

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8 points

I feel like if the short version isn’t “sub” then it is never going to stick. Reddit doesn’t own words but it has set the standard. Sublemmies. That’s what it is in my mind now.

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2 points
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58 points

+1 for Communities, since that’s what they are called in the official UI and documentation

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0 points

I like Lemmings. Has a ring to it.

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Linux

!linux@lemmy.ml

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).

Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word “Linux” in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.

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