Personally i’m looking forward to seeing twobestfriendsplay, arkhamasylum, whowouldwin, and respectthreads, on here.

    • Subbed, though as a newb to Lemmy it’s a bit difficult.

      Since wizjenkins isn’t subbed by my server, !pathfinder1e@lemmywizjenkins.com was not showing up for me. I had to hand-build the /c/pathfinder1e@lemmywizjenkins.com into my lemmy.ml.

      I feel like I’m either missing something, or it’s something that lemmy could do slightly better.

      • You can post my URL into your Lemmy instance search box and it will add it to the list of communities on your server. Super unintuitive since it doesn’t show you that it did that, but I discovered that doing that or getting a post on a community and posting that in the search would let you subscribe to the community.

        Honestly community discovery is a super pain point right now. If I hadn’t set up my own instance I don’t know if I would have easily figured it out.

        • Actually did that and got zero results in lemmy.ml. Which was baffling to me.

          The other way that works is clicking your name and then clicking the community in your “Moderates” box. Which proved to me that this instance can see your instance. If seeing your username wasn’t enough for that.

                • Is it a bug, or defined behavior for a reason I just don’t quite grok yet?

                  I’m a typescript vet, and if I really stick to lemmy I can see myself trying to help out a bit… but I also get about 4 hours of sleep a night, so it won’t be soon ;)

                  • I think it’s defined behavior because the idea (sort of from mastodon I guess???) is that there’s the local instance and it’s communities, and then the federated world. Presumably some people want to ?maybe? stay close to home? It’s def a techie way of thinking, like having your own internal wiki, and then knowing about wikipedia say.

                    It made sense to me because I already worked it out for mastodon, but otherwise I can see how that’s confusing.

          • Hmm that is odd. I wonder is that is some slowness in lemmy.ml since they are overloaded causing the federation to slow down. The server can be set to have a limit of federation workers, so if all of those are busy getting updates from servers it might not show up.

            That’s a guess though since I haven’t dug into the codebase and there aren’t really any architecture diagrams of how Lemmy is constructed.