• Nmyownworld
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    3
    ·
    1 year ago

    Thanks. I just hit the wrong button and lost my reply to you. Shaka, when the walls fell. Giving it another go.

    I’m deciphering an image whose original post I’ve lost in a sea of Lemmy links I’ve been reading and bookmarking. Image link is below. So, Lemmy is an umbrella for instances (servers), which in turn can host (I’m not sure if host is the right term) other instances? Is Star Trek an instance like a mini-reddit, or an, I don’t know what to call them, an instance like a subreddit within the mini-reddit?

    The image I mentioned:

    https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/0006c2db-13c6-406e-97e7-6e274fddf355.png

    • Value Subtracted
      shield
      OPMA
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      5
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      Yeah, so the terminology can get weird, and the Reddit comparison is tricky Because you have to imagine multiple Reddits (the platform, not subreddits) for it to really work.

      Servers and Instances are used pretty interchangeably - each one is privately operated, and you pick the one you want to sign up on - startrek.website is one of these instances.

      Each instance can host its own “Communities” - there are like subreddits. We’re hosting three right now, /c/startrek, /c/daystrominstitute, and /c/risa.

      The neat-but-complicated part is that each instance can communicate with other instances, so if you want to subscribe to a community on a server other than the one you signed up for, you can (within reasons, as there are mechanisms for instances to isolate themselves or block other instances from communication if they choose to do so).

      So yeah, you can look at startrek.website as a mini-reddit with three Trek-related subreddits…but you can also use it as a springboard to subscribe to other subreddits on other mini-reddits.

    • Someology
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      If you’ve been on the Internet a long time, good analogies seem to be like email servers or (back in the day) Usenet servers. There can be lots of servers, and you get an account on one, but then you can post and read between all the servers. Like being on gmail but emailing people and reading emails from their accounts at other places. Or back in the day, like being on your ISP or university’s Usenet server, but reading posts from other servers and posting things people on other servers can read.