Its not that hard!
Its not that hard!
Its not that hard!
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"Works just like email" is always easy way to explain. Everyone who uses email understands that they can send a message to a @gmail.com account from a @yahoo.com account or any other server.
Ah yeah just like email. All I had to do to comment here from a different instance was:
/post/<id>
from the URL and paste it in my instance. Nope 404.You are not logged in. However you can subscribe from another Fediverse account, for example Lemmy or Mastodon. To do this, paste the following into the search field of your instance: !fedimemes@feddit.uk
Fediverse memes@feddit.uk - 792 subscribers
?Success!
Just like typing in someone@yahoo.com
. 🙄
- "Maybe if I click login it will somehow do federated login?" Nope.
- Ok what if I copy the
/post/<id>
from the URL and paste it in my instance. Nope 404.
Yeah, these two are major pain points. They are unintuitive, i would argue. If you click "login", it should ask you for your username. If your username is lisa@bumblebee.com
, it takes you to bumblebee.com
and lets you finish the login process there.
The /post/<id>
should have been fixed a while ago. I don't know why it wasn't.
I don't think the lack of "federated login" is unintuitive. You wouldn't expect going to gmail.com and logging in with your Yahoo credentials to work, right?
Having a "federated login" service would probably either add a ton of complexity for instance owners, or someone would implement some super naive and insecure centralized solution, leading to a bunch of people's creds getting stolen.
Getting the post/<id>
thing to work across instances would be a pain too, because it would require instances to all coordinate post IDs to ensure collisions don't happen, since far as I can tell, the id in the URL isn't globally unique.
Well most apps take care of that for you. I'm on a different instance and all I had to do was hit the reply button. For most people setting up the account and choosing server is the hardest part. If I handed someone my phone with an account already made they wouldn't even know they are viewing and commenting on different servers hosted by different people. They would just think its a different looking reddit clone. But I don't agree that logging in if your not on your home instance is hard as it requires you to find the post again. Some apps have an option to pull up the post on a different instance but last I checked that's on an option on the web browser.
I recently came across a scenario where the person I was talking 'felt uncomfortable' taking down my email, because it didn't end in .com. I would be careful when making assumptions about the general population.
I would have been happier having never read this. [ [ P A I N ] ]
I've signed up to websites that had entry validation on the email field that flagged not having .com at the end as invalid. Literally someone that should know about technology decided it would be a good idea to make it that way.
That's when you write to the domain's postmaster address to thell them that their shit's messed up.
What do you mean, what's a postmaster?
The most success I've had is just explaining that it's a social media platform that exists across a variety of websites that all synchronize communities and posts and comments and votes, and you can interact with any of them from any other one
The problem with the email analogy is that, for most people, email exists as the Gmail app on their phone. It does not occur to them how I can send an email from my Hotmail account to their Gmail account. The moment you say the word protocol, 80% of people's eyes glaze over
That’s when I break out the sock puppets and high-pitched voices.
Unfortunately that's not the case. there are many who don't understand what's that after the weird "a"
I blame Twitter for butchering the very well defined URI specification.
People don't actually know that nowadays.