thanks a bunch that helps! in terms of reddit, i’ve been using it for almost 15 years and the subreddits i liked seem to have changed recently, or maybe gotten “too big”. i think the API changes last year really shook things up too. hence why i’m on beehaw now! anyway, i’ll take a look at the lemmy verse communities, thanks!
Comment on Why Everyone Should Still Use an RSS Reader in 2024
tal@lemmy.today 9 months agoI mean, that kind of heavily depends on the area of your interests; I don’t think that it’s really possible to say “forum X is interesting” in a vacuum. I’d add that I still think that there are interesting subreddits on Reddit, though I agree that the front page isn’t very appealing these days, at least to me.
On the Threadiverse, though, I would say that as things stand, lemmy is not really good at helping one find existing communities. There’s the newcommunities announcement community at !newcommunities@lemmy.world, but those, by definition, don’t have a userbase when announced, and some of the creators don’t do the work of regularly posting content until they catch on. Kbin reccomends random posts in the sidebar, but that’s a pretty shotgun way to find things.
What I’d probably do is use the Lemmy Explorer’s community search, which as things stand is the only way I’m aware of to search all of the communities across all of the Threadiverse.
awmire@beehaw.org 9 months ago
petrescatraian@libranet.de 9 months ago
@tal
That is a good way indeed, although I'm yet to find a way to filter after new or active communities.
I like the fact that I can filter the instances that I don't like or that my server has blocked, so I can see actual relevant content for me. 😁
@awmire
tal@lemmy.today 9 months ago
Look at the drop-down menu next to the search field, which lets you sort via different criteria.
I think “newest publish time” is the date of community creation.
For activity, it has number of active users in various given periods of time.
petrescatraian@libranet.de 9 months ago