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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by _thayer@lemmy.world to c/lemmyworld@lemmy.world

The time is ripe for philanthropists and academia to rise to the occasion and help shape a social network for the people, by the people.

Lemmy appears to be the closest thing to a publicly-operated reddit alternative. With tens of thousands of redditors looking for something better, I am somewhat surprised that more instances aren't rolling out from well-financed FOSS agencies, technologists and others.

It would be great to see some of the 3PA developers committing to this platform in response to Reddit's increasing enshittification.

There is an opportunity to capture the momentum that is underway, to begin taking back what we've lost to corporate interests these past twenty years, and to tear down the walled gardens.

[-] _thayer@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I've primarily used Arch for my workstations since around 2007, and sometimes Debian Sid. I recently switched all of my workstations to Fedora Silverblue however, and I've been very happy with this type of workflow; flatpaks for user apps, containers for my dev environments, and automated image-based core OS updates. I am convinced this is the future of Linux computing for most users.

[-] _thayer@lemmy.world 27 points 1 year ago

The use of 'comm' and 'comms' as short form for communities makes the most sense to me. Lemmy's url path already uses /c/ as the designation as well.

Like 'sub' and 'subs', they are one syllable, and are easy to say and spell.

_thayer

joined 1 year ago