Very difficult to discuss with the fiance without know the terminology yet lol
bonegakrejg ( @bonegakrejg@lemmy.ml ) English77•1 year agoSub-Lemminal messages?
newbiejones ( @newbiejones@sh.itjust.works ) English12•1 year agothat’s brilliant actually for a mobile app name
proxzima ( @proxzima@lemmy.ml ) English5•1 year agoI like this one
Venus ( @Venus@slrpnk.net ) English73•1 year agoThey’re communities. And the different servers/sites are instances.
SammichParade ( @SammichParade@vlemmy.net ) English38•1 year agoPetition to name them SubLemmys
Communist ( @communist@beehaw.org ) English42•1 year agoI like communities, honestly, it sounds much less… y’know, reddity?
And also, it’s much more intuitive.
bnaur ( @bnaur@lemmy.world ) English5•1 year agoPersonally that term makes me a bit uneasy. To me it sounds too grandiose and organized just for something that might just be some random people shitposting or chatting about their interests. And actually having tight knit communities can easily lead to all kinds of negative effects, group think, hierarchies and drama.
Of course some subreddits, forums, lemmy communities etc can be actual communities but just as a personal preference I don’t like the idea of calling them that default.
BigUwU ( @BigUwU@lemmy.world ) English2•1 year agoI don’t like the term community because it’s difficult to understand the hierarchy. Is an instance a part of a community? Or vice versa?
What do you think of subinstance?
bnaur ( @bnaur@lemmy.world ) English4•1 year agoTo me subinstance sounds more like a technical term, but I guess people would just call them subs anyway. I think that’s a problem in general with deriving anything from “instance”.
I guess community does a good job at being a more human centric term. You have the technical side of things, servers and software (instances) and on those you have the actual user facing parts (communities) so in that way it’s kinda fitting.
Further overthinking about the terminology I just realised that Lemmy calls joining communities “subscribing” and Reddit calls it “joining”, while I would naturally think it would be more fitting the other way around. Naming things is hard.
Guy_Fieris_Hair ( @Guy_Fieris_Hair@lemmy.ml ) English2•1 year agoI think “sub” is what people are going to call them reguardless. It is just internet language at this point, a subdivision of a community (by community I mean lemmy as a whole) is called a sub. Weather it’s a subreddit or sublemmy. I’m not saying bring reddit with us, I am just saying the internet can take the term “sub” with it and use it elsewhere.
Heimchen ( @Heimchen@lemmy.ml ) English9•1 year agoInstances also need better names.
Communist ( @communist@beehaw.org ) English6•1 year agoWhat would you call gmail vs hotmail?
Lemmy.ml ( @dnzm@lemmy.ml ) English6•1 year agoProviders.
amiuhle ( @amiuhle@feddit.de ) English3•1 year agoBut that’s a provider/customer relationship, on the fediverse it isn’t.
unfazedbeaver ( @unfazedbeaver@lemmy.one ) English4•1 year agoAgree on a technical level, but in terms of the average netizen being able to visualize the relationship, “providers” makes it much easier
amiuhle ( @amiuhle@feddit.de ) English4•1 year agoI don’t think we should try to visualize something that’s not there just because it’s (supposedly) easier for the average netizen.
Justin ( @jlh@lemmy.jlh.name ) English3•1 year agoFor now. Commercial servers are possible, especially if communities become multi-instance in the future.
Every mature decentralized service calls them providers. Phone providers, ISPs, email providers, etc. I guess usenet just calls them “news servers”, though.
Ferk ( @Ferk@lemmy.ml ) English2•1 year agoIt’s provider/consumer (not customer, something being a “provider” doesn’t necessarily mean they are selling stuff).
We are consumers, we consume the content that the instances provide, as content providers.
MasterBlaster ( @MasterBlaster@lemmy.world ) English6•1 year agoWhy not “servers”? That’s all they are. They serve content.
SpacePirate ( @SpacePirate@lemmy.ml ) English1•1 year agoBecause technically, one server can host multiple instances. Instances are containerized— literally an instance of lemmy.
Communist ( @communist@beehaw.org ) English1•1 year agoIs there any practical reason to actually do that, though?
negativenull ( @negativenull@negativenull.com ) English8•1 year agoSublemminals? (or Sublemmynals)
Dougie ( @Dougie@lemmy.dougiverse.io ) English1•1 year agoLove it 😂
9488fcea02a9 ( @9488fcea02a9@sh.itjust.works ) English1•1 year agonew to lemmy…
if there different “linux” communities on different instances? does this mean i have to subscribe to all of them? is there a way to see all content from communities called “linux” from different instances?
or does each “linux” community simply fight for critical mass to become the “main” linux community on lemmy?
thanks
Mane25 ( @Mane25@lemmy.world ) English1•1 year agoI don’t dislike the idea that there could be multiple similar communities (for example Linux communities) on different instances. That way if you have beef with one you could sign up to another; in a non-ideal world that strikes me as healthier than having one to rule them all and lots of people bitter about it. I think it’s best to leave it to sort itself out organically.
Venus ( @Venus@slrpnk.net ) English1•1 year agoThere could be different linux communities on different instances, and to see them all you’d have to subscribe to them and sort by subscribed view. But yeah, in practice most of the time there will emerge one “main” linux community and, if it gets big enough, likely offshoot communities for different philosophies or more specificity.
JohannesOliver ( @JohannesOliver@beehaw.org ) English3•1 year agoA “merge identical” option in the individual users’ ui would be kind of neat, to have one page.
Venus ( @Venus@slrpnk.net ) English1•1 year agoThat does sound like a good idea, kind of like Reddit’s old multireddit function.
Lemmington ( @Lemmington@sopuli.xyz ) English69•1 year agoCommunities, which have a parent instance.
redawl ( @redawl@sh.itjust.works ) English64•1 year ago+1 for Communities, since that’s what they are called in the official UI and documentation
Fredselfish ( @Fredselfish@lemmy.ml ) English3•1 year agoI like Lemmings. Has a ring to it.
open_world ( @open_world@lemmy.ml ) English63•1 year agoI just thought they were called “communities”. At least, that’s what the Lemmy UI shows.
konki ( @konki@lemmy.one ) English10•1 year agoSo “coms” for short?
bradmoor ( @bradmoor@lemmy.nz ) English20•1 year agoCommies
3laws ( @3laws@lemmy.world ) English3•1 year ago⚒️✊
PorkrollPosadist ( @PorkrollPosadist@lemmy.ml ) English2•1 year ago
Guy_Fieris_Hair ( @Guy_Fieris_Hair@lemmy.ml ) English8•1 year agoI feel like if the short version isn’t “sub” then it is never going to stick. Reddit doesn’t own words but it has set the standard. Sublemmies. That’s what it is in my mind now.
Yadaran ( @Yadaran@feddit.de ) English48•1 year agoI’ll just call them sublemmys
Senseibull ( @Senseibull@lemmy.ml ) English15•1 year agoLol I quite like it, at one point reddit was a foreign weird sounding word
Knoll0114 ( @Knoll0114@lemmy.world ) English8•1 year agoWay more fun than communities! Plus it speaks to the Reddit exodus in a bit of a tongue in cheek way.
Seraph089 ( @Seraph089@sh.itjust.works ) English6•1 year agoIt’s a nice lighthearted nod to the exodus, and also a nod to the subforums that came before Reddit. Communities may be the “official” name and I try to use it when talking to others, but they’ll always be sublemmys in my head.
JohannesOliver ( @JohannesOliver@beehaw.org ) English1•1 year agoI think using Communities is respectful to the people that were already doing community on Lemmy before the exodus.
KSposh ( @KSposh@lemmy.world ) English6•1 year agoI think this is the clear winner
Guy_Fieris_Hair ( @Guy_Fieris_Hair@lemmy.ml ) English2•1 year agoIts prefect, I think the “trade name” for that is “sub” anyways and that’s what they will be called no matter what they are suposed to be called.
staticnoise ( @staticnoise@infosec.pub ) English47•1 year agoCommunities is the name used on my UI.
humanplayer2 ( @humanplayer2@lemmy.ml ) English12•1 year agoMine, too. And it’s fits the /c/… format.
ug01x ( @ug01x@lemmy.world ) English3•1 year agoI think this is correct. In my headcannon I have started to call flowing through the different sites exploring the lemmyverse, which just feels right.
fossilesque ( @fossilesque@mander.xyz ) English40•1 year agoLemmings!!!
teawrecks ( @teawrecks@sopuli.xyz ) English26•1 year agoBut aren’t WE the lemmings?
kadu ( @kadu@lemmy.world ) English12•1 year agoSurprisingly philosophical
稲荷大神の狐 ( @kitsuneofinari@yiffit.net ) English4•1 year agoDude… You just blew my mind. (ʘ ͟ʖ ʘ)
cybermass ( @cybermass@beehaw.org ) English2•1 year agoSo I looked it up, if we are lemmings then for some reason a group of lemmings is called “a slice of lemmings”.
So I vote we call them slices
EnglishMobster ( @EnglishMobster@kbin.social ) 39•1 year agoOn Lemmy, they are “communities”.
On Kbin, they are “magazines”. I am told that “magazine” is a pun in Polish (Kbin’s maintainer is Polish).
HeartyBeast ( @HeartyBeast@kbin.social ) 18•1 year agoHaving been here all of 30 minutes, referring to them “bins” might be a nice
Syo ( @Syo@kbin.social ) 12•1 year agoDid we just witness the birth of viral content in this bin?
shaal ( @shaal@kbin.social ) 5•1 year agonice and simple. this works for me…
speck ( @speck@kbin.social ) 2•1 year agoDitto. This is the winner!
DarkThoughts ( @DarkThoughts@kbin.social ) 5•1 year agoI wholeheartedly agree with this one. It’s also still semi funny referring to them as basically trashcans. But I think as a new user it is just way more streamlined and sensible than calling them “magazines”. When I read that first I just could think of like paper magazines and thought they’d be some sort of editorial content, which is highly misleading. Calling them “bins” just makes way more sense and sort of adds to the brand of the platform.
squeebee ( @squeebee@kbin.social ) 4•1 year agoBin there, read that.
Skullduggery ( @Skullduggery@kbin.social ) 3•1 year agoYeah I mean it’s short and kind of right there in your face… +1 for bins
OutXider ( @OutXider@kbin.social ) 5•1 year agoIf they’re called “magazines”, then I’m calling them “clips” for short.
shootwhatsmyname ( @shootwhatsmyname@kbin.social ) 4•1 year agoHow about mags?
fuzzyshark ( @fuzzyshark@kbin.social ) 2•1 year agoI think I prefer “zines” as a shortened form of “magazines.”
“Clips” sounds more like a post within a magazine. BreadDog ( @BreadDog@kbin.social ) 2•1 year agoOhh, I like zines as a shortened version
Xperr7 ( @Xperr7@kbin.social ) 2•1 year agoOh man, that’d annoy so many people that are pedantic, including me lmao.
Aliyen ( @Aliyen@kbin.social ) 1•1 year agoI’m going “gazis.”
noodlejetski ( @noodlejetski@kbin.social ) 2•1 year agoone of kbin instances (the first one, maybe?) is called karab.in (“rif.le”), hence the magazines I guess.
_thayer ( @_thayer@lemmy.world ) English33•1 year agoThe use of ‘comm’ and ‘comms’ as short form for communities makes the most sense to me. Lemmy’s url path already uses /c/ as the designation as well.
Like ‘sub’ and ‘subs’, they are one syllable, and are easy to say and spell.
42triangles ( @42triangles@beehaw.org ) English18•1 year agoIf someone says “comms” I’m going to think “communications”
but I guess that also technically works ^^
IverCoder ( @IverCoder@lemmy.ml ) English5•1 year agoI saw red vent in comms
setVeryLoud(true); ( @isVeryLoud@lemmy.ca ) English3•1 year agoWhen someone says “sub”, I think “dom”
Or sandwich, depends on my mood.
voxel ( @vox@sopuli.xyz ) English29•1 year agojust call them communities (I also sometimes just call them topics because that’s how they’re called in my reddit clone pet project)
torgeir ( @torgeir@lemmy.ml ) English29•1 year agoLemmings
Pagliacci ( @Pagliacci@lemmy.ml ) English23•1 year agoIf anything I think that’ll be what us users end up calling ourselves.
a_lemming ( @a_lemming@lemmy.ml ) English10•1 year agoIndeed
ban ( @ban@lemmy.ml ) English8•1 year agousername checks out
3laws ( @3laws@lemmy.world ) English1•1 year agoAh the good ol’ user-roo. Hold my jokes, I’m going in.
primalmotion ( @primalmotion@lemmy.antisocial.ly ) English27•1 year agoofficially, per protocol, it’s Groups. but that sucks :)
tebicat ( @tebicat@sh.itjust.works ) English14•1 year agoisn’t that an ActivityPub term, not a lemmy term? usually ActivityPub uses different terms than the servers that use it.
guildz ( @guildz@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) English4•1 year agoYeah, in the lemmy source code they are called “Communities”; in the kbin source code they are called “Magazines”; I think Mastodon uses the ActivityPub lexicon and also uses “Groups” in it’s source code. I perfer “Communities” because that is how the “Groups” are being used.
qprimed ( @qprimed@lemmy.ml ) English27•1 year agooh snap! you know Lemmy has hit the big time when its a topic of discussion between SOs!
Lvxferre ( @lvxferre@lemmy.ml ) English8•1 year agoI’ve been talking about it with a relative, because she really enjoys “popcorn” (i.e. drama).
qprimed ( @qprimed@lemmy.ml ) English8•1 year agonerd drama the best drama. :-)
sup ( @sup@lemmy.ca ) English26•1 year agoI like communities. I believe that’s the the /c/ stands for
CeruleanRuin ( @CeruleanRuin@lemmy.one ) English4•1 year agoMight as well keep it simple and call it what it is without the branding. There is plenty about a site like reddit that we should carry forward, but plenty were should leave behind, and redundant jargon is the latter.