No Stupid Questions
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I also see deleted comments, I guess by the user. Which is odd, bc like if they wanted to remove it that's their choice I suppose, but Lemmy still shows me reply notifications, but then when I go to read it, it's gone!?
Are you on the same instance as the deleting user? This sounds like a quirk of federation.
This does seem the most likely explanation. But... my instance seems to be aware of the deletion at least, and yet still chooses to show it. It could show the old message, it could remove it entirely and show no notification, it could get fancy and show nothing by default but then upon requesting addition information show it anyway... but out of all the various possibilities, it chooses the single most annoying one? 😜
I think the real reason has nothing to do with federation. It's probably just one of the many UI bugs. You get notifications on reply but cancelling of notifications isn't implemented. That would mean once you open that notification, the post is refreshed (because there could be new comments, someone could have edited or deleted something) and the UI learns it got deleted at this point and the reply vanishes.
There is a bugreport open for it: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/3816
Little by little, progress is being made - in the meantime the software isn't quite "finished" yet, but somehow still the UX ends up being significantly better than Reddit:-).
Yeah. I've asked quite some questions in the AMA the developers had a few weeks ago. Seems they have quite something on their plate. I've reported more serious UI bugs last summer/autumn and they're still open along with several other bugs. But I'm not involved in how things get prioritized. However I've heard them say multiple times that all of this is more work than they can do with the manpower available.
Yeah note how the version number is 0.19.3 - that's not 19.3, or 1.93, it's still far from 1.0 yet.
When Reddit imploded Lemmy got hit with this deluge of new subscribers, but it wasn't quite ready for it. On the other hand, third party apps were made almost instantly, so definitely the pace accelerated:-).
And they've been hit with multiple spam attacks, from 4chan and Discord, so those I am sure were considered the priority.
I know. I've been watching Lemmy since 2021 so I've been around for quite a while before the Reddit exodus happened. Before that Lemmy was mainly a wasteland. There were a few communities that would connect you with people but the majority of it felt just like talking to yourself. I think all the people coming from Reddit was necessary to lift it beyond a small Linux forum with 100 infrequent visitors. But it definitely was problematic. The state of the project wasn't prepared for that kind of growth. I'm sure a few devs and admins spent their nights handling that instead of getting some sleep... And we only get by as of today. I'm still waiting for bugfixing and new features, but that won't happen before the foundation is in good shape and it seems we have to be patient with that.
I'm a bit split on the version number thing. Sure, you can poke around with your hobby project for 10 years and slowly build something in peace that isn't actively used by anyone... But this approach doesn't deliver the goods. If you want to create something useful and get to a point where it actually provides something for someone, you have to have users, grow with your community at an adequate pace.
And from the user's perspective: We want a platform to communicate. I like this style of discussion and there isn't some other, superior federated alternative around. And I want to do it now, not in 5 years time. So the expectations might clash a bit, here.
I think fighting spam is the job of the instance admins. The developers are indirectly responsible, their job is to provide the tools to fight spam and moderate. I just started to get Spam recently, but I don't watch the All feed, just my subscriptions so I could have missed it. However I saw all the DDoS attacks happening and I was affected by those. Nowadays I have several accounts on different instances, so I'm prepared.
I'm a relative newcomer myself, just from the time of the protests, and yeah I am also making multiple accounts. My Kbin one I even gave up on almost entirely, but you never know when it may come in handy:-).
I wonder how much of the development issues are related to the choice of languages, if it unnecessarily restricts the number of people who can help, or the political stance of the originator turning people away who are unwilling because of that. But Kbin, Mbin, and other spin-offs are happening, and even Threads and whatnot, so it does seem to be happening, just slowly.
And the interface is somewhat good even now, okay so not quite so "stable" but as you said, that was mostly from DDoS so understandable that it could take some greater difficulty to turn those away.
I expect great things in its future:-).
But either way I'm not likely to leave. (And even if I did, I still would never return to Reddit!:-P)