Maybe, but I think people overstate this. Reddit's desktop UI and official app still confuse and upset me. Frankly the on-boarding to Lemmy is easier if anything
gh0stcassette
I would expect the big jump to come when people who are barely engaged with this whole thing try to open Apollo or Sync or whatever in a few weeks, seeing it doesn't work, then spending 5 minutes trying to use the official app before getting frustrated and googling "reddit alternative"
Adding to this: text-generation-webui (https://github.com/oobabooga/text-generation-webui) works with the latest bleeding edge llama.cpp via llama-cpp-python, and it has a nice graphical front-end. You do have a manually tell pip to install llama.cpp-python with the right compiler flags to get GPU acceleration working but the llama-cpp-python github and ooba github explain how to do this.
You can even set up GPU acceleration through metal on m1 Macs I've seen some fucking INSANE performance numbers online for the higher RAM MacBook pros (20+ tokens/sec, I think with a 33b model, but it might have been 13b, either way, impressive.)
If you want to see what a forum site looks like without any of that stuff, look at 8kun/8chan. I don't think you realize how unusably terrible reddit would be without mods.
Before Elon, it was about half an million, now it's about 4.5 million, though about a million of the new users made an account and then immediately went back to Twitter, so it's more like 3.5 million
Yeah, it's basically like email. Though I imagine an instance like that would get defedded pretty quick
Yeah, it's a beautiful system. When all the banned Twitter Nazis moved to gab and then gab moved to Mastodon everyone immediately defedded them, it's like having a pre-curated blocklist of most of the worst people on the platform
Almost definitely, but no guarantee a new instance will have the same communities 1-1 though. It would be really useful for resubbing to non-local communities thought
Self-hosting might be the only way to do this, I imagine any instance with enough users will have people wanting to post locally
It may or may not take off to the point of replacing reddit, but I think the exodus if people now and especially after the end of the month will lead to it having at least the same amount of users as Mastodon. Maybe more, since the average reddit user is probably more tech-savvy and more willing to migrate to a different platform than the average Twitter user (since they follow subreddits rather than individual users). And a roughly Mastodon sized lemmy is more than usable to replace reddit imo
Please do!