Echoing on from @howdy, think of it as email: if you have a gmail account, you can still talk to someone with a yahoo account. The same principle applies here: given the URL (link) to community, you can subscribe to it and view all posts on it using an account on any server, so the sign up server does not matter to have access to all content.
Yeah I get the connection to email now. When I went searching for something i got example@feddit.de and finally made connection to what you wrote. It’s not as complicated as I initially thought. Thank you for your explanation
As a new user I find the different servers a little confusing, especially since you’re saying I can interact with others just the same. What is the purpose of all that, and couldn’t it be doing what it’s doing in the back end without me being aware of it?
Usually, when you sign up to a service (E.g Reddit, Facebook, etc), you connect to their centralised servers, and access all data from those servers. This also carried the risk of being subject to overly harsh policies surrounding moderation or even content of posts. Lemmy is “distributed”, meaning that, since there isn’t any one person who owns all of the servers, not only can you theoretically set up your own server that you can never be banned from (since you own it), but for the influx of users currently happening, the load of all the new people is spread across a lot of unique servers which interact, meaning the whole system doesn’t collapse if one server becomes too overloaded. In theory, it doesn’t matter which server you sign up to, as you can access all content anywhere on Lemmy from it (ignoring potential blocks of other servers, though this shouldn’t be much of an issue), but what would change is both:
What servers you can easily find in the search bar, as only servers someone on your server has interacted with will appear initially.
What content you see on the “Local” tab of the sidebar, as that tab only shows posts from communities on your particular server, E.g Lemmy.lukeog.com for me, and Lemmy.ca for you.
Echoing on from @howdy, think of it as email: if you have a gmail account, you can still talk to someone with a yahoo account. The same principle applies here: given the URL (link) to community, you can subscribe to it and view all posts on it using an account on any server, so the sign up server does not matter to have access to all content.
Yeah I get the connection to email now. When I went searching for something i got example@feddit.de and finally made connection to what you wrote. It’s not as complicated as I initially thought. Thank you for your explanation
As a new user I find the different servers a little confusing, especially since you’re saying I can interact with others just the same. What is the purpose of all that, and couldn’t it be doing what it’s doing in the back end without me being aware of it?
Usually, when you sign up to a service (E.g Reddit, Facebook, etc), you connect to their centralised servers, and access all data from those servers. This also carried the risk of being subject to overly harsh policies surrounding moderation or even content of posts. Lemmy is “distributed”, meaning that, since there isn’t any one person who owns all of the servers, not only can you theoretically set up your own server that you can never be banned from (since you own it), but for the influx of users currently happening, the load of all the new people is spread across a lot of unique servers which interact, meaning the whole system doesn’t collapse if one server becomes too overloaded. In theory, it doesn’t matter which server you sign up to, as you can access all content anywhere on Lemmy from it (ignoring potential blocks of other servers, though this shouldn’t be much of an issue), but what would change is both: