I started a sub that had 400k users and was around for 10 years. /r/functionalprint
After I made it read only, admins they just up and gave it to some rando mod that had no experience in that sub at all.
So it doesn’t surprise me the mods of a lot of subs have absolutely NO experience in the subs they are modding.
Screw Reddit.
There are a ton of dangerous 3D printing happening. Especially people doing shit that’s pressurized.
That was my favorite sub, and I’m really sad it didn’t take off on lemmy. I noticed it was back up on Reddit a few weeks ago and I thought about messaging you to ask if you put it back or reddit gave it to someone else. Fuck reddit.
Just a quick note that there’s no content on that link because that community hadn’t federated to that instance before. Any new content will, but old content doesn’t usually pull very far into the past.
You already linked the lemmy.world link above, which has federated content, another example would be lemm.ee
Typing in the link as I did above will create a link for each user that appears native to their instance, rather than sending them to lemmy.world, kbin.social or lemm.ee
EDIT: I’m not entirely sure how to get this to work right on kbin if the above method isn’t working. If you have a suggestion or something different to try, would definitely love to make sure I’m linking in a way that works for the kbin users too!
just did the above. It’s removed the @kbin.social part, but still not a link on Kbin, even when I create it.
EDIT: Interesting, so I used italics so it would show what I actually typed it, and it’s a link on your lemmy, where when I typed it without italics, the @blahblahblah was removed by kbin
It is a copy paste of the same reply I made to the post where 9to5mac.com talked about the same thing theverge.com did.
I noticed a few people comment they didn’t know subs migrated/existed. So I replied here with the same thing, and sure enough other people again didn’t know the sub migrated/existed.
People (including myself) are learning how this federating works. How the sub on kbin gets shown on other lemmy instances, and how those people in those instances can see/find the sub through their instance.
I’m still wrapping my head around some comments not showing up, and how subscriptions work.
And how the thumbnail picture and links work for some posts, and on some instances and doesn’t for others.
I started a sub that had 400k users and was around for 10 years. /r/functionalprint
After I made it read only, admins they just up and gave it to some rando mod that had no experience in that sub at all.
So it doesn’t surprise me the mods of a lot of subs have absolutely NO experience in the subs they are modding.
Screw Reddit.
There are a ton of dangerous 3D printing happening. Especially people doing shit that’s pressurized.
That was my favorite sub, and I’m really sad it didn’t take off on lemmy. I noticed it was back up on Reddit a few weeks ago and I thought about messaging you to ask if you put it back or reddit gave it to someone else. Fuck reddit.
I was a subscriber to your sub. I didn’t see it here on Lemmy as another poster mentioned. Is it still around here? I’ll join.
https://kbin.social/m/functionalprint
On your instance it would be https://lemmy.world/c/functionalprint@kbin.social
Subbed… Thanks
You can link it for everyone like this:
!functionalprint@kbin.social
Example clickable link this !functionalprint@kbin.social
That’s not a clickable link?
Are you using an app or the web interface? It works on Lemmy, maybe it doesn’t work on kbin?
Here is what it looks like on Lemmy: https://fry.gs/comment/116299
Just a quick note that there’s no content on that link because that community hadn’t federated to that instance before. Any new content will, but old content doesn’t usually pull very far into the past.
You already linked the lemmy.world link above, which has federated content, another example would be lemm.ee
Typing in the link as I did above will create a link for each user that appears native to their instance, rather than sending them to lemmy.world, kbin.social or lemm.ee
EDIT: I’m not entirely sure how to get this to work right on kbin if the above method isn’t working. If you have a suggestion or something different to try, would definitely love to make sure I’m linking in a way that works for the kbin users too!
I went to lemmy to see what it looks like. I can see the link.
Yeah, on Kbin (web interface), it’s not link.
Test
!functionalprint
Yeah, typing in
!functionalprint@kbin.social
just did the above. It’s removed the @kbin.social part, but still not a link on Kbin, even when I create it.
EDIT: Interesting, so I used italics so it would show what I actually typed it, and it’s a link on your lemmy, where when I typed it without italics, the @blahblahblah was removed by kbin
Subscribed!
Same here!
https://kbin.social/m/functionalprint
On your instance it would be https://discuss.tchncs.de/c/functionalprint@kbin.social
Do you comment this often? I swear I’ve read this before.
It is a copy paste of the same reply I made to the post where 9to5mac.com talked about the same thing theverge.com did.
I noticed a few people comment they didn’t know subs migrated/existed. So I replied here with the same thing, and sure enough other people again didn’t know the sub migrated/existed.
People (including myself) are learning how this federating works. How the sub on kbin gets shown on other lemmy instances, and how those people in those instances can see/find the sub through their instance.
I’m still wrapping my head around some comments not showing up, and how subscriptions work.
And how the thumbnail picture and links work for some posts, and on some instances and doesn’t for others.
Oh good. I’m not going crazy then :-)
loved that sub! Plans on bringing it back on the lemmyverse?
There’s https://kbin.social/m/functionalprint
I loved that sub!!
That was a good sub… Shame
That was a great sub - you did something great there :)
Ooh shit that last part.