It’s specifically a forum with branching threads, popularity scoring, and topic-oriented communities that ordinary users can create and moderate. That’s the successful formula.
Lemmy is missing that last feature. I hope that’s merely because it’s not implemented yet and not the result of an intentional design decision.
You can create communities on instances other than Beehaw. Beehaw has some restrictions which include not being able to downvote and not being able to make new communities, so yeah it’s an intentional decision on their part.
Second panel could also be “Was I a link aggregator?” Because it’s hardly that anymore.
It hasn’t been that since it got self-posts and comments in 2006; it’s a forum.
Lemmy and kbin are also forum software and should embrace being good at that.
It’s specifically a forum with branching threads, popularity scoring, and topic-oriented communities that ordinary users can create and moderate. That’s the successful formula.
Lemmy is missing that last feature. I hope that’s merely because it’s not implemented yet and not the result of an intentional design decision.
You can create communities on instances other than Beehaw. Beehaw has some restrictions which include not being able to downvote and not being able to make new communities, so yeah it’s an intentional decision on their part.
Any idea why Beehaw doesn’t allow people to make new communities?Edit: Never mind, it says right here.
This might count as embracing … an official alternative old-school forum front-end to lemmy (running on a separate instance): https://fedibb.ml/