Only ever had experiences with Reddit, Lemmy and very little bit of Discourse.

  • @UrLogicFails@beehaw.org
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    101 year ago

    I’ve been wondering about different forum softwares recently as well.

    The Lemmy software seems like it might not be developed enough for the size of the userbase. This feels to be the case even more so after the attacks on Lemmy.world which would’ve been less of a problem with better moderation tools.

    I’ve heard people throwing around the idea of forking Lemmy, but I’m not sure how likely that is.

    I haven’t used a non-link-aggregator forum in a long time, so I might be biased; but I don’t personally like the style of them. I prefer the information density of Lemmy/ Reddit/ Tildes style link-aggregator forums. The ability to have multiple independent comment threads for each link definitely helps encourage discussions (in my opinion).

    My personal preference would be for Lemmy to develop stronger mod tools, but who knows how likely that would be?

    • Lionir [he/him]OP
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      51 year ago

      I haven’t used a non-link-aggregator forum in a long time, so I might be biased; but I don’t personally like the style of them. I prefer the information density of Lemmy/ Reddit/ Tildes style link-aggregator forums. The ability to have multiple independent comment threads for each link definitely helps encourage discussions (in my opinion).

      I mean those UI bits could be tweaked, for example - I saw this which I thought was neat https://meta.discourse.org/t/topic-list-previews/101646

    • @jarfil@beehaw.org
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      21 year ago

      Lemmy/Reddit also allow “self posts” with no links, so technically they’re two-in-one.

      One could create a community and treat it as a personal “blog”, write posts in there, and have the comment section be the comment section for the post.