I’ve never tried it. Is it really more confusing than Lemmy?
Not really helpful though is it? It’s like going to a friend’s house and asking why there is a sink hole in the middle of the floor that everyone is walking around, and they say “feel free get a hammer out”.
I’ve been really enjoying Politics JOE recently. They have a podcast which is great. It’s irreverent and silly at times. Aimed at those in their 20s and 30s and very much left leaning, so if that isn’t you you’re probably not gonna have a good time.
Having said that, I do think they have some really interesting political takes while not taking themselves seriously.
Ouch, it hasn’t progressed at all since last time he got roasted for pretty much the same screenshot
As the other person mentioned, it matters to an extent because the admins of your instance have the ability to cut ties with other instances (defederation). They also have the ability to make instance wide actions like banning a community belonging to that instance (in the same way Reddit admins can ban a subreddit).
Some instances will naturally be stricter about what types of communities are allowed and what types of instances they will federate with. For that reason, it’s important the instance you join aligns with your values, e.g. you probably don’t want to join an instance that tolerates alt right communities.
Comments and posts sync. We are on different instances but are still talking to each other.
Just think of each separate site (AKA ‘instances’, like lemmy.world, sh.it.just.works) as different competing versions of Reddit. All with their own different subreddits.
The key difference though is that these instances are all partnered together (‘federated’) because they are running on the same technology so you can see posts from the other instances.
Just imagine the cringy name they’d come up with… BritTwit or something.