Firefox: uBlock Origin, Bitwarden, Simple Tab Groups, New Tab Suspender, SponsorBlock for YouTube.
I ate all the food. Sorry.
Firefox: uBlock Origin, Bitwarden, Simple Tab Groups, New Tab Suspender, SponsorBlock for YouTube.
I recently discovered STG, and I cannot stress enough how great it is! It takes a minute to set up with colors and group names. But, oh my, how great it is to have my Spotify, Last.fm, Bandcamp, etc, in a Music tab, all my work stuff in a Work group, all my general stuff (Facebook, Lemmy, and so on) in a Home group, and so on. Being able to toggle between them is so useful.
That was suggested for the official announcements: Beehaw Yeehaws. 😂
I am also an 11-year Reddit vet making the move. Welcome! This isn’t my first Fediverse experience, but definitely my most promising (I don’t really tweet, so Mastodon is kind of whatever to me). This and kbin have been great.
I was also part of the Voat migration. I never left Reddit, as I didn’t mind them cracking down on some of the more questionable content, but I did check Voat out. I wasn’t part of the cesspool that showed up there, but I did enjoy participating in some of the smaller communities. I think what didn’t work was that it just got stale. Same reason I didn’t like Snapzu or some of the other “Reddit alternatives.” Even larger communities were just… dead. What made Reddit work was that everyone was there, and even small, niche communities had active users.
I haven’t seen that personally - for me, that experience was on Rumble. I think that’s where a lot went. My experience on Odysee has been largely tech/crypto, DistroTube, The Linux Experiment, Linux and privacy stuff. But I guess everyone’s experience varies. I went in subbing to those channels, so maybe I got served more of the same.
As for YouTube, Odysee exists and has a mirroring for YouTube uploads for content creators, but it’s mainly just tech and crypto people at the moment - yes, there’s others, but most everyday people have never even heard of LBRY or Odysee.
Thanks for the in depth links. I appreciate it. That’s unfortunate. With that, that’s the beauty of open source and having different options for instances to join. I know Beehaw doesn’t subscribe to those uh ideals. I’m also on kbin, which can interact with Lemmy and everything. I don’t know - I’m still brand new to all this.
From my understanding, you can interact between the different platforms. They are a little different in their approach, and I don’t fully “get” kbin just yet, but you can post to and interact with Lemmy from a kbin account.
That’s the issue with having so many potential places to migrate to now - people are scattered across different platforms. Reddit worked because that’s where everyone went. Millions of users means a greater potential for an active community with your niche interest. But I guess maybe there was uncertainty at the start - I came in a little after, but long before most “everyday people” had even heard the word.
Honestly, if the key smaller communities that I’m in on Reddit don’t migrate away to another platform, then I don’t know that I’ll even fully leave. Assuming the site doesn’t completely implode at this point, of course. For as many subs as I subscribe to, I really only find myself on a handful each day.
That said, spez has really soured my taste for Reddit with the AMA. I only really use old.reddit on desktop, but I’ve used mainly third-party apps over the years, like most people, I would assume. Even if they lowered API costs to be more reasonable AND third-party app devs decided to come back, they’re still limiting NSFW access to third-party app API calls anyway, so a lesser experience either way.
At the end of the day, I’m going to be where the community is, be that here, kbin, or whichever one rises up and has staying power and growth over the next couple years.
Can you elaborate? Genuinely. I’ve seen this take a few times now.
I’ve joined both in hopes of seeing which one thrives the most in terms of users in the niche communities that made Reddit worth visiting for me, personally. So far, they seem largely similar. Points to Lemmy for having an Android app ready to go. Kbin has one in early, early beta that is (according to the GitHub) lacking in certain functionality.
Joined kbin today. Been on Lemmy for a few days. I just want to be where the community is. :')
All the alternatives I’ve tried in past exoduses have been mostly fine as far as platforms go, just seriously stale and lacking due to lack of users and interactions. One thing I loved about Reddit was there always being enough people that even super niche communities had active users.
Members of the community highlight built in sponsored segments and the extension/addon allows you to skip over them.