DDOS incoming :O
honk
That sounds like the most stupid shit ever. I'm usually not the person that blocks a lot. I believe in 5 years of twitter i maybe blocked 3 accounts plus a couple of spam bots. But still...like...why would you think that this is a good idea?
Are you trolling?
I mean I guess Lemmy is deeply rooted in the open source community so I believe that people here tend to have more interest in the steam deck because it's an open system running on linux so there is a huge overlap in the communities.
Also why do you believe that reddit is anti nintendo? The nintendo switch sub alone has almost 5 Millions subscribers and is in the top100 sub reddits.
There is not a lot of things that I enjoy more than a Dane speaking German. It just sounds...cute. Sorry :)
Ich hatte das Problem auch schon beobachtet. Bei mir hatte sich das Problem allerdings nach 30 Minuten von alleine Gelöst. Ich rate jetzt einfach: Es ist vielleicht möglich, dass nachdem feddit.de von der community kenntnis erlangt hat, erst einige Zeit vergeht, bis alle Kommentare gecached wurden. Das könnte eine mögiche erklärung sein. Um welche Community handelt es sich denn? Hast du mal versucht, die seite komplett neu zu laden (strg+F5)
I wouldn't recommend hosting it from your home network. Even if you are only having a couple of buddies on there it could easily be ddosd by a post going viral or something. Also you would permanently leak your personal IP adress to the outside world. There are ways to protect yourself against that but it's probably not worth the effort. You are better off just renting a cheap vps for your 50 person instance. You can rent those for like 5usd a month. Share that money with a handful of friends. Everyone puts 10 bucks in and you can pay upfront for multiple years.
I'm not a web developer. I'm sort of a sysadmin so i have some experiences maintaining machines for web apps for other people. And you are right...text will not create massive amounts of data. But a lot of tiny transactions can bring down machines surprisingly fast even if the total amount of data is relatively small.
I guess we are here to experience it first hand. I don't think anybody...not even the developers have a clear idea of how well this will scale. There is only one way to find out lol
I would try to find a solution for instance agostic links for posts or comments. afaik there is currently no way to do that.
Wenn ich hier so einen Kommentar schreibe steigert das die Sichtbarkeit...?!...
maybe I phrased that poorly and you didn't understand what I was trying to say. The size of the bigger instance shouldn't matter at all because only data from communities is pulled, that a member of the smaller instance is subscribed to. So if the bigger instance has 1000 members or 2 million members wouldn't make a difference. The only thing relevant should be how active the communities are that members are subscribed to.
I don't think this is an issue tbh.
The full name of a community includes the instance is running on. For this community here the instance is asklemmy@lemmy.ml . If you are referring to community you should include the instance to avoid confusion.
To the issue of duplicate communities: That issue existed on reddit too. Communities with slight variations in the name always existed. Sometimes the owners of some variation of the community just decided to forward their users to a "main community". Sometimes multiple communities coexist. I believe that in most cases a certain "main community" will establish itself as the one that the majority just accepts as the "real deal" because it has the most activity and the best moderation policies.
Naja...Heise war schon für den einen oder anderen Server-Krepierer verantwortlich. Früher gabs dafür mal den Namen "heise effekt". Keine ahnung wie oft das heutzutage noch vorkommt.