Main account: @Blaze@reddthat.com
That’s a nice roadmap
There is probably no reason now, but hopefully in the near future Sublinks will reach feature parity with Lemmy, and could even surpass it. Technological stack can have a huge impact on the development speed of a project.
In other words, let’s wait and see
Java, Go, TypeScript, and HTML
Different technologies. Rust is a more niche language, which is sometimes used to explain why there aren’t that many contributors to Lemmy
Makes sense, let us know about the progress on your project, seems promising!
That’s interesting.
The demo indeed looks very much like Lemmy, I guess the changes are mostly in the back-end side: https://demo.sublinks.org/
There is !harrypotter@literature.cafe if you want to join. There is some activity at the moment, but not enough to go for a dedicated instance.
Also, as the other comments have shown, the bigotry of the author does not help.
From what I remember, the mbin team was indeed discussing it. I don’t remember the details, but I think it was aligned with what you are saying.
I think so, that’s not that big of a deal, is it?
https://github.com/MbinOrg/mbin has more active development
That’s good. Vetoes were preventing too much things in the past. This should push member states to compromise and find agreements with each other.
I was unpopular 3 months ago
Lemmy.world holding such a prevalent place in the Lemmy/Kbin part of the Fediverse makes it a major single point of failure.
They should still be the newcomers instance, but communities and users should migrate to other instances to increase the resilience of the Fediverse.
I’m not talking about users, but communities.
In summary, if you really want to make sure that your communities are well managed, host them on your own instance.
It does somehow, because you are responsible for keeping it online
Happy cake day!