I’m sharing this post and it’s thread because I’ve run into this issue of not being able to find communities, users, posts, or comments on other instances, or the communities are missing a substantial number of comments and votes even after interacting with these posts and receiving new replies. Is this functionality standard and desirable behavior? Why or why not? I’m trying to understand how it’s expected to work, because it’s not very intuitive starting out to explore other instances sometimes.
Maybe we could brainstorm a way to make it more intuitive. What are the trade-offs involved? Why does it work they way it currently works? Is there a better way?
The main point that has been brought up is the fact that users from smaller, newer instances will not be able to access the backlog of posts and comments from older more established instances. I’d say a lot of the value of the platform comes from this foundation of posts sorted by votes on a link aggregator site like this. Should new users be encouraged to join the older, more established instances in order to have access to the most content?
cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/357141
SOLUTION FOUND - thank you
There is a community called Tarot on lemmy.world, and I want to subscribe to it. The url is https://lemmy.world/c/tarot. I’ve been to lemmy.world when not logged in and I can see it there. But when I try to find it from here, I can’t. I tried putting !tarot@lemmy.world in the search and got “no results found”. I’ve been told that “someone needs to search for it, for it to appear”, but I have already tried to search for it, many times. What else needs to happen for me to be able to see and subscribe to this community?
Or do I just have to make a second account on lemmy.world?
Follow up question: After the first contact, will all new posts, comments, votes always be federated between the two instances?
And also, after federation occurs, I guess that means that new posts from the other instance will now show up in the ‘All’ feed, where as they wouldn’t have before.