I am new here (kbin, but I guess this might post to other websites as well??) and am trying to understand how this place is similar and different from reddit. Is there a good overview somewhere? I already accidentally spammed this question three times as a microblog, whatever that is, and am trying to figure out how to actually do things.
How do I subscribe/join/whatever a community? Can I private message people?
What terminology do I need to know?
What’s up with the following people thing?
How do the points work (agree/disagree, relevant/not relevant, something else…)?
What else do I not know that I don’t know?
Thank you!
What terminology do I need to know?
This should suffice for now:
Fediverse: Basically a set of individual websites, the content of any one of which can be accessed through any other website from this set of websites. Read on for the ‘how?’
Magazine: Similar to a subreddit.
Thread: Similar to a Reddit post.
Microblog: Similar to a tweet on Twitter.
Post: A microblog posted in a magazine.Find the navigation menu on kbin, which is at the top of the webpage if you are on PC or tap the trigram on the top left of the web page if you are on mobile. You should see items named ‘Threads’, ‘Microblog’, ‘People’ and ‘Magazines’ in the navigation bar.
How do I subscribe/join/whatever a community?
To browse the list of all magazines or search for specific ones, simply click on ‘Magazines’ on the navigation bar. When you do, you’ll find a search bar to search for magazines and a list of magazines sorted by the most number of subscribers. You can search for a magazine by just typing in a keyword like ‘history’. The search results will bring you magazines from kbin that have the keyword ‘history’ in their names or descriptions. In addition to kbin magazines, you will also find communities from other sites of the fediverse.
Here are the first 5 results I get searching for ‘history’ in the magazine search:
- chess
- Etymology
- historymemes@lemmy.ml
- history
- askhistorians@lemmygrad.ml
The magazines of kbin appear with just their name, as in the case of the chess, Etymology and history magazines. The communities analogous to kbin magazines on another fediverse site, lemmy.ml appear as you see in the case of historymemes@lemmy.ml. lemmy.ml is a different website from kbin.social, but you can access and interact with the content from lemmy.ml through kbin.social and using your kbin.social account. Click on the magazine name and you’ll find the option to subscribe on the right side of your screen on PC. On mobile, scroll all the way to the bottom and start scrolling up and you should find it. You can access your feed with content from subscribed magazines by clicking on the list icon to the left of your username on the top right of the web page on both PC and mobile. A dropdown menu will open up with an item called ‘Subscribed’. There you go.
I guess this might post to other websites as well?
You have posted to kbin.social in the RedditMigration magazine. A user of some other fediverse site will only see it if they are browsing RedditMigration@kbin.social from their site. If a user from some other website engages with your post, their user ID will appear here as username@fediversesitename, similar to how yours is username@kbin.social.
How do the points work (agree/disagree, relevant/not relevant, something else…)?
Favorite(up arrow)/Reduce(down arrow). Who favorites/reduces a particular thread/comment is public. Find the ‘more’ option on a comment and click on ‘activity’.
Another form of engagement is boosting (find the ‘boost’ option near the ‘reply’ option on a thread/comment/microblog), which is similar to retweeting on Twitter.
Is there a good overview somewhere?
An overview of fediverse can be found at jointhefediverse.net.
So I get the favorite and reduce, magazines, etc. But one thing I haven’t seen anyone talk about is “boost”. What does boost do? I figure it helps to “boost” someone’s comment above others more so than an upvote? Do we only get a set number of boosts to use?
Boosts are like retweets on twitter. There is no limitation on boosts.
Added to original comment.
Okay, so I’ve been using Mastodon for years so I basically understand the idea of how content is propagated.
People on your instance are following someone and so you see the people they follow on your feed, or else they boost posts that they can see in which case people can see them on your feed.
I know this is using the same protocol but I’m trying to understand a few things –
It sounds like each instance has separate magazines, so this means different instances have different magazines. How does it handle it when two instances have magazines with the same topic? No real attempt at trying to merge the two? It seems impossible to do with distinct mods from separate servers with different rules, did someone figure out a way?
Similarly, if someone from @kbin.pub wants to comment on a thread in a magazine on @kbin.social or whatever (assume valid instances), how do they know that the thread exists? They subscribe to that magazine on a different instance and then see it in their own home page? Or does them subscribing to a magazine on another instance make that magazine appear to others on their own instance?
I guess I’m trying to understand how this system is handling discovery and moderation in a forum system where different instances split up a forum, it would be neat if things were somehow interleaved.
Another Reddit refugee chiming in. I’ve been on Reddit and ONLY Reddit for ages… everything in the fediverse seems so alien. Kbin seems the most familiar so far.
Thanks for asking the questions, and huge thanks to the folks answering!!
What do y’all recommend for actually navigating the fediverse? Like, looking at the URL, the social part of kbin.social tells me this is kind of a hangout spot focused on conversation and less on content; but then I see magazines like this one and other topics like medicine and news, so… .social has everything? I see I can navigate magazines and such within .social, which seems like exactly what I’m looking for in an escape from Reddit, but I’m wondering if I skipped a step in landing on .social, and should first weigh it against the kbin.OtherOptions?
There’s also the whole seeing content on other platforms thing - how do I actually do that? Like from here on kbin, can I add something on Lemmy (which I aslo don’t know squat about) as a… magazine? follow? something else?
I’m going to chime in, but fair warning, it’s just what I think, so I could be wrong.
The .social doesn’t actually mean it’s only for social things. It’s similar to a .com or .org. We can put anything we want up on it, similar to Reddit. We can have threads about non-sense similar to r/askreddit, or very detailed discussions similar to r/askhistorians or r/science.
I believe at the moment kbin and lemmy aren’t talking to each other, or if they are, it’s more complicated than it should/will be in the future. The whole point of these sites is “federation”, each is its own little mini-group/site/“Reddit”. Like the US is made of states. At the moment I’ve heard kbin federation is either turned off or not working, so believe the borders are closed. But eventually it’ll be turned back on and we will be able to visit other federated sites/places like lemmy and mastodon.
At the moment I think the big difference is the UI and how things look on your originating site. But as things grow moderation and content will also be a difference. In theory maybe you don’t like the way the gaming part of kbin is moderated but you like lemmy’s, you’ll be able to see posts and visit that site through kbin one day.
Also, a magazine on kbin is basically a subreddit. You subscribe to it, like you would a magazine. Then you can see the posts. Boosts are apparently like following a hashtag on Twitter, but I never did Twitter, so I don’t know exactly.