I run the FBXL Network including FBXL Search, FBXL Social, FBXL Lemmy, FBXL Lotide, and FBXL Video. Mostly for my own use because after having my heart broken by too many companies I want to be in control of my own world.

I also wrote The Graysonian Ethic: Lessons for my unborn son, now on Amazon

  • 1 Post
  • 33 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 18th, 2023

help-circle













  • Tech enthusiasts have always been the early adopters. They’re the ones who see the potential for a new platform and migrate to it first. Recall that the internet itself was just a thing for nerds for the longest time.

    Somebody has to be first. It isn’t going to be people who are only going to follow, it isn’t going to be people who are going to leave when they realize that none of their favorite people are on there. Going to be people who have some kind of vested interest in trying this new and interesting thing.

    As for the relatively older age, I hate to say it but a lot of kids think that technology is consumption. It’s a big problem. In a recent shocking employer survey, employers talking about the lack of tech skills among gen z. This isn’t an isolated data point, either. There’s a lot of data suggesting that kids are growing up as experts on TikTok and Facebook rather than fundamental skills that would let you go out and do something like run a website.




  • You really need to just test on a piecemeal basis. It’s a matter of what works with what, and sometimes even the devs don’t know.

    What I’ve found so far:

    Lemmy uniquely grabs old posts from Lemmy, but most software is “here and now” so you won’t see a history if you go somewhere until your instance is following it.

    Mastodon can see Lemmy communities and users and you can DM people on mastodon from lemmy, but you can’t follow Mastodon users on Lemmy because the paradigm is different.

    Lotide communities can be followed and interacted with. I think the latest Lemmy has fixed federation in the other direction.

    Friendica groups can be followed and interacted with. Users are the same as mastodon users

    Peertube channels can be followed like communities and you can see, upvote, and comment on videos, but you can’t post anything new – your instance will let you, but it won’t federate.

    Kbin communities can be followed, be aware that kbin is in its early days so it has a lot of work on the back-end.

    I was not able to federate with a.gru.ppe communities.

    Hopefully this helps, and maybe others can post their discoveries. Decentralization is strength on the fediverse. The more things we can connect to, the less reliant we are on any one thing.

    To do a lot of these, you put the community, magazine, or channel url into Lemmy search. It takes longer than you expect but if it’s federating at all it’ll show up on the search, then you can go and subscribe.


  • They’re already on the fediverse. Tens of thousands of people on thousands of servers saying things that make libsoftiktok and gaysagainstgrooming look like woke hippies.

    The thing is, unlike big tech which wants you to see things that piss you off because it drives engagement and will actively put you in that situation, for the most part people tend to stick together in groups. You’ll get the odd troll looking for a thrill, but overall there isn’t an algorithm doing the Jerry Springer thing so other than a cheap thrill there’s no point to it.

    Algorithms end up being really sneaky in that regard.