https://sh.itjust.works/c/neurodivergentlifehacks
!neurodivergentlifehacks@sh.itjust.works
https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/c/accidentalrenaissance
!accidentalrenaissance@lemmy.blahaj.zone
I would think professional boxing, based on the content of the community having posts discussing professional boxers
I haven't seen a community for requesting others to create communities, unless I have missed it. The original purpose of this community is to find discover and promote new communities, and is still the main purpose, but requesting a community is okay, even if it isn't the main purpose. For example, there was a post recently asking for alternative communities for venting/psychological help and there was some suggestions, and while that wasn't a post for promotion of new communities, it wasn't taken down, since it was related to new communities. I would say just to request it and maybe ask if one is already created, and one might be hosted on a different instance that you don't know about yet
I used all three of them, that one is the second link
Well one reason is that I don't moderate or participate in all of these communities, I'm simply documenting them here. Many communities are being created across Lemmy, so this is a place to help people find them, and I'm fulfilling the purpose of this community by posting them?
yes it is, though it wasn't really clear in the image that it was
Would you mind if I pin this post? I feel like it will be helpful if people can see this post the second they enter this community, to help with the 0-1 post problem
Okay, you are now a moderator!
I'm not familiar with the term unsers. However, there is a point for multiple communities. Lemmy is meant to be decentralized with no central authority, leading to multiple communities that are the same (or with similar topics) that have different rules and moderators.
As an example, the first one is based on posting AI generated images with no specific platform while the second one is to share tips, questions, and images created on Midjourney only. This shows the differences, but even if the topics were entirely the same, it would be important for choice and decentralization
Okay, that's good to know. I wasn't aware of that problem, I hope you get some progress on that issue soon!
It's an allowed instance, you can review allowed and blocked instances on lemmy.ml here:
You may be thinking of beehaw.org, who defederated immediately with lemmy.world and sh.itjust.works:
I have never used the Jerboa app so take this all with a grain of salt, since it may be different than the website. The link with the [link text](/c/community@instance.com)
should only work if the community is already linked with your instance, the two other formats can be put in the search bar, and after the instance fetches it, it should show up, but not sure how this all works on the app version though
Thank you for saying that!
Yes, it would best to use two links, that is why I said you should include the following format in the post, then said it gets a 404 sometimes, and to include one of the other formats too that you can use while searching, if it wasn't searched for already
Good idea to link that one too, but this is a feature on Lemmy to have multiple communities with the same topic, no centralization so we aren't just reliant on one instance. For more niche topics, it might make sense so small communities don't get even more fragmented. However for communities like gaming, a broad topic, it should be fine to have on multiple instances
A more thorough post is pinned in this community, but to put it simply,
[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine](/c/ds9@lemmy.world)
The brackets is the text that shows up, and the ds9@lemmy.world is the community and the instance the community is on.
Yeah, however after it is searched it should work, the 404 problem might happen sometimes since all these communities are new and might not be connected with all instances yet
While not every community is on Lemmy yet that I visit on Reddit, by people migrating from Reddit to here, hopefully that issue will be solved soon. The community here seems way more welcoming than the Reddit community is too