this post was submitted on 24 Jun 2023
1 points (52.9% liked)

Self Hosted - Self-hosting your services.

11447 readers
29 users here now

A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.

Rules

Important

Beginning of January 1st 2024 this rule WILL be enforced. Posts that are not tagged will be warned and if not fixed within 24h then removed!

Cross-posting

If you see a rule-breaker please DM the mods!

founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
 

I am the CTO for an early-stage FinTech startup, and am looking to connect with architect-level developers who have managed their own self-hosted instance of Lemmy to help stand up a standalone, non-federated instance on a cloud provider such as AWS or Azure. This would be paid work, can be part-time to fit your schedule, and will have the option to become full-time upon our next round of funding.

Please reply or DM me if you have any interest and would like more details. Thanks!

Jason

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] JasonDLehman@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

We're looking for a Community Management platform that has the features and usability of Reddit. Unfortunately we are not experts in Community Management tools, so are doing analysis a bit blindly.

We initially liked Discourse, as it is a pretty common open-source platform for online forums. However after standing up a proof of concept we are now highly skeptical that it scales horizontally enough for our needs...the concept of "infinite user-created sub-reddits" are an absolute must-have, and has been the major sticking point on the tools we have reviewed and piloted so far (including a number of proprietary non-open source options). Discourse themselves told us to limit the number of Categories that should be used, so my sense is that this is an inherent architectural limitation that can't be overcome without significant investment and branching of the code base. Comment voting is also a must-have, as well as a few other things. We are finding that these seem to be strengths of Lemmy and other Reddit-style platforms. And Lemmy seems to be the most popular...with the most community support. However if there is another platform that might better option, I'm open to it.

[–] FleaCatcher@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

Meaning no offense to Lemmy devs, Lemmy still has some things to iron out until they can safely say "we're at version 1.0" - it's in beta, being battle tested as we speak, and it's not afraid to push feature breaking changes. For example, the latest version, 0.18, fixed a very annoying bug that pushed new posts in real-time (websockets) when using the web interface, but disabled captcha. Jerboa, the main Android client, pushed an update that removed compatibility with Lemmy below 0.18. lemmy.world, who competes with lemmy.ml for the first two instances by number of users, refused to upgrade to 0.18 because it needs captcha to ward off bots - now you can't use Jerboa with lemmy.world, and the web interface has the bug with new posts. So, all this rant should give you the idea that Lemmy is far from production ready, and it's not a desirable choice, yet.

I've been the engineering manager for a Twitch clone that got sold for the tech part a couple of years ago - check your DM, sent a personal link, you can use the email there if you want me to help.