I also immediately replaced my weather app. Never heard of this one. Very impressed.
I also immediately replaced my weather app. Never heard of this one. Very impressed.
Yeah, I think that’s one of the user experience issues we’re facing. Setting the canonical as the original server makes the most sense, but that would mean if you find something interesting via a search engine you have to figure out how to get it to show up on your home instance.
Like for me, since I run my own instance for myself and one other person so far, I have to find interesting communities manually. It’s really annoying. Though, looking at Lemmy v0.18 release notes, a lot of new devs have made contributions and I’m sure more will help in the future. One improvement from yesterday’s release is visiting a remote community on your home server will pull the community rather than returning a 404
. I think changes like that are big first steps towards improving this specific aspect of the user experience.
I think you’re right. Looking at the html source for this page I don’t see a canonical tag, though. Maybe they haven’t added it yet? Or I missed it.
Looks like you can follow communities by pasting their URLs in the search bar on Mastodon. The communities show up as if they’re users, but it looks like you can follow them and I guess reply as you normally would. Like you can follow this community by searching this URL: https://lemmy.world/c/selfhosted
I agree it would be nice if the instances would pull in communities automatically instead of us needing to manually search for them. I guess that’ll be something the Lemmy devs do something about in the future. In the meantime, I have been using this site: https://lemmyverse.net/
I also did the Ansible setup.
Are you subscribing to communities? I think searching just pulls something like 20 posts but nothing else. Everything starts getting pulled in when someone subscribes.
I also had some issues with pictures but the problems just kind of resolved themselves. Maybe try resetting the server and see what happens.
I see so many comments from people saying they’ll jump ship if Google adds this to Chrome. They’ll move over to Firefox right away. But the thing most people don’t know is one reason Google has such a broad reach is they make it so crazy easy to integrate their services for developers.
So, yes, users who dislike what they’re doing should stop using Google products if possible. But, more importantly, developers or project managers, etc. should all resist the urge to utilize this kind of feature even if it’s easy.