Lemmy.world has got a plurality of 1K/mo Lemmy communities. (122 vs 140) Lemmy.world and Lemmy.ml together make a majority of 1K/mo Lemmy communities (152)
Lemmy.world has got a majority of 5K/mo Lemmy communities (30 vs 22)
Lemmy.world has got a majority of 10K/mo Lemmy communities (12 vs 7)
Lemmy.world has got only 20K/Mo Lemmy community
Only 1K/mo national "sublemmies" are Canadian, Australian, British and German. Only non-English 1K/mo "sublemmies" are German.
I'm not thrilled about the concentration on lemmy.world, and it's no coincidence that most of my posts are to my home instance and a growing community on lemmy.zip.
I'll admit to trying to have it both ways, though. I still post on !games@lemmy.world because it could be a draw for new users, and I'd rather have a robust population on a concentrated Lemmy than zero growth (and I'm not the type to discuss world news/politics in this setting).
Nice post but hard to read. How about using tables?
head 1
head 2
body 1
body 2
like this:
| head 1 | head 2 |
| --- | --- |
| body 1 | body 2 |
Edit: are we sure the data is correct? For example; Lemmy.ml has 16 communities over 10k. Which are linux, memes, asklemmy, technology, worldnews, privacy, opensource, gaming, fediverse, unixporn, linux_gaming, reddit, science, lemmy, selfhost, jerboa.