39
Looking for a Reddit alternative? Lemmy tell you, they currently kinda suck
(www.androidauthority.com)
### About Community Tracking and helping #redditmigration to Kbin and the Fediverse. Say hello to the decentralized and open future. To see latest reeddit blackout info, see here: https://reddark.untone.uk/
With the popularity of Reddit and how simple (in theory) of a concept it is, it blows my mind that there is not an alternative. Kbin and Lemmy are okay, but they are pretty big compromise so far.
I can forgive the issues with Kbin and Lemmy because Reddit has had more time and resources to build the platform. My hope is that with the new attention and the open source nature that Lemmy will show consistent improvement to where I don't feel like I'm compromising.
To be entirely fair with Kbin:
From Kbin.pub: "NOTICE: This is a very early beta version."
For being an early beta, kbin is usable and remarkably polished. I think the downsides for most people are deciding what server to join and content discovery.
There's been little demand. Give it some time. Enjoy being in in the ground floor, or wait until it's a little more mature. The more use and demand the more we're going to see improvements and alternative mobile apps and such.
I fully expect it's going to get better. None of the issues mentioned, from a quick skim, are insurmountable except figuring out where to sign up.
Because there isn't enough resources to develop it without any real interest. Most of fediverse projects start as personal projects and evolve as they gain traction.
This version is the worst it will ever be. It can only improve from here as corporate greed is not a factor with open source project.
What are the big compromises? I've only been here for a day or two.